Research article

Can Jane Get a Mortgage Loan? Depends on When and Where

  • Received: 22 January 2017 Accepted: 21 March 2017 Published: 10 April 2017
  • By analyzing data from 102 million mortgage loan applications in the US between 2004–2012 (about 90% of all applications) across 3, 141 counties and 8, 000 financial institutions, we investigate whether applicants' gender matters in the bank's lending decision. We find evidence that female applicants face a higher rejection rate than males, holding all else constant. Similar results are obtained for Hispanic applicants compared to non-Hispanics, and minorities compared to non-minorities. Moreover, we document that this discrimination is pro-cyclical (i.e. peaks in recessions) and that it varies substantially across states. Most importantly, we show that non-economic factors help explain the variation in discrimination across states while economic factors do not. Specifically, we find that gender discrimination in lending is higher in states with (ⅰ) high level of conservatism, (ⅱ) low support for gay rights, and (ⅲ) low female representation in the state legislature (JEL E32, G21, J16).

    Citation: Alexis Antoniades, Fatma Marafi. Can Jane Get a Mortgage Loan? Depends on When and Where[J]. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2017, 1(1): 67-93. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2017.1.67

    Related Papers:

  • By analyzing data from 102 million mortgage loan applications in the US between 2004–2012 (about 90% of all applications) across 3, 141 counties and 8, 000 financial institutions, we investigate whether applicants' gender matters in the bank's lending decision. We find evidence that female applicants face a higher rejection rate than males, holding all else constant. Similar results are obtained for Hispanic applicants compared to non-Hispanics, and minorities compared to non-minorities. Moreover, we document that this discrimination is pro-cyclical (i.e. peaks in recessions) and that it varies substantially across states. Most importantly, we show that non-economic factors help explain the variation in discrimination across states while economic factors do not. Specifically, we find that gender discrimination in lending is higher in states with (ⅰ) high level of conservatism, (ⅱ) low support for gay rights, and (ⅲ) low female representation in the state legislature (JEL E32, G21, J16).


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  • © 2017 the Author(s), licensee AIMS Press. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
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