Document Type
Research Report
Publication Date
12-2004
Abstract
The present study is the latest in a series of annual updates of the original report, Changing Patterns: Mortgage Lending in Boston, 1990-1993. Beginning in 1998, the reports’ geographic scope was expanded t o include an examination of mortgage lending patterns in 27 cities and towns surrounding the city of Boston. In last year’s report, the geographic coverage was further expanded to include a total of 108 communities.
The text that follows this introduction highlights some of the most significant findings that emerge from the extensive set of tables and charts that constitute the bulk of the report. The first of the two major parts of the textual portion of the report, together with Tables 1–11 and their associated charts, provides an analysis of lending in the city of Boston from 1990 through 2003. This analysis is subdivided into three sections which focus, in turn, on total lending within the city, on lending by major types of lenders, and on lending under targeted mortgage programs.
The second major part of the text, together with Tables 12–20, examines detailed information on mortgage lending patterns in 108 individual communities – all 101 cities and towns in the Metropolitan Area Planning Commission (MAPC) Region plus the seven largest Massachusetts cities outside that region – as well as in four progressively larger geographic areas: the MAPC Region as a whole, the “old” Boston Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), the “new” Boston MSA), and the entire state. Table 12 is preceded by a map of the MAPC Region.
Recommended Citation
Campen, Jim, "Changing Patterns XI: Mortgage Lending to Traditionally Underserved Borrowers & Neighborhoods in Greater Boston, 1990-2003" (2004). Gastón Institute Publications. 125.
https://scholarworks.umb.edu/gaston_pubs/125
Included in
Inequality and Stratification Commons, Public Policy Commons, Race and Ethnicity Commons, Real Estate Commons
Comments
Prepared by the Gaston Institute at the University of Massachusetts Boston for the Massachusetts Community and Banking Council (MCBC).