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The weight of the mortgage meltdown fell heavier on minority and lower-income communities, in part because their wealth

was concentrated in their homes. As the United States emerges from the housing crisis marked by record foreclosures and joblessness, some civil-rights groups are urging policies that make homeownership accessible to first-time homebuyers. James Carr is a housing-finance, banking and urban-policy consultant and senior policy fellow with the Opportunity Agenda, a think tank focused on social-justice issues. He argues for replacing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with a federal housing-finance enterprise with a broad purpose. We need a new housing entity to be able to handle owner-occupied housing, rental housing, and community infrastructure such as roads and sewers, said Carr, who holds a masters of urban planning from Columbia University and has testified before Congress on issues including the economy, housing markets, wealth disparities, and economic mobility. It would help us rebuild from the crisis and help create jobs, ones that are in the green-economy sector.

Carr, who served as the chief business officer for the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, spoke to The Next America during a Washington event focused on closing the racial wealth gap. What major policies will we see in the next four years that address the wealth gap? The future of the housing market is the single source of wealth creation for the typical American household, regardless of race and ethnicity. That has been the case throughout the 20th century. We need to make sure that were looking at policies of revamping or replacing Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac that actually serves first-time homebuyers and minorities. The housing market after the collapse is very different than the housing market before the collapse. We need to ensure the 30-year fixed mortgage continues to be available to families. What initiatives would allow these groups to access homeownership? We need to find ways to bring new homeowners [to the market] who may not necessarily have the same financial characteristics they had before the housing bubble -- people who had unfair and deceptive mortgage products, such as subprime loans, and are still ready for homeownership, meaning they are financially fit and have the right motivation but simply had the wrong product so they lost their home. Many of those families still have good jobs and are responsible. But they may not have the credit because their home was foreclosed. For some people, [an option might be] a longer-term sustainable model, such as a lease-to-own option that enables their rent to go toward a down payment. After a period of time, they will have already paid the down payment and show they have the best credit history because it will be documented how and when they paid the rent. If they have a stellar repayment history on that rent, then it should be transformed into a 30-year or 25-year fixed rate. Shared equity [where both the lender and the borrower share in purchasing a home, with the understanding that the borrower will give the lender a share of the profit when the house is sold] is another initiative. We also have to look at the fact that we have 11 million vacant and abandoned properties littering communities across the country and the lowest interest rate in history. Why are we not leveraging that for moderate-income households and people of color? Currently, only those who are wealthy are able to purchase homes because they can afford the 20-percent down payment and have [credit] scores in the high 700s. You spoke about a pilot infrastructure bank to help the housing market and job creation. Can you explain? In general, housing leads an economic recovery. This housing market is not leading nor following. Its dragging the economy because it just isnt working well. An important and innovative piece is that we need to have a pilot community infrastructure bank. President Obama talked about it in 2008 before the worst of the housing downturn. Now, after the crisis, do we not need it? An infrastructure bank would invest in roads and sewers. This would create jobs, ones that cant be exported overseas. This is not just to rebuild individual wealth and rebuild communities, but its also a way to drive the economy.

Theres a lot of attention on minorities because of the countrys shifting demographics. Why should the nation pay attention? Communities of color are the fastest-growing populations in the nation. When were talking about wealth and inequality, were talking about the fact that these populations have not only lost the most, but they are also the fastest growing in America. As of 2009, Latinos lost two-thirds of their net wealth; Asians and blacks lost 54 percent and 53 percent, respectively. In order to have a strong America, in order to have a strong economy, and Id like to say, in order to have strong national security, you have to find a way to have these populations economically mobile again.

Rosa Ramirez | Reporter

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