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However, Black real estate agents contended that other factors outside of their background and clientele contribute to the fact that they often make less money than their white counterparts.
As a Black real estate agent ... priced 23 percent lower than homes owned by white people. But an agent’s background and their clientele are not the only reasons Black agents generally ...
Black and Hispanic real estate developers represent 0.56% of the total number of private U.S. developers, and only about 5% of owners in the real estate industry as a whole, according to a new study.
The Jacksonville, Florida couple, Abena and Alex Horton, had two appraisals: For the first one, they kept on display in their home their family photos, Black ... White people, even real estate ...
Today, 15 percent of Black applicants are denied mortgages while 6 percent of white applicants are denied the home loans, according to a report by the National Association of Real Estate Brokers ...
92% of property appraisers and assessors in 2022 were White and 4% were Black. Lydia Pope, president of the National Association of Real Estate Brokers, says her organization is working to recruit ...
Sam Dolciné, the founder and host of the Black Real Estate Dialogue [BRED] podcast ... Sam now lives in Los Angeles and has a background in Human Resources and Talent Acquisition.
OPINION: The Wealth Wednesday’s Real Estate Club started ... rate than their white counterparts—simply because of the color of their skin. This so-called “Black tax” isn’t a literal ...
Racism has led to a potential windfall for a Black couple in California who have settled with a real estate company after it gave a higher estimate for their home to a white friend who pretended ...
She said her grandfather was one of the first few Black real estate brokers in Akron ... unique to people of color in predominately white professions. “I’ve had agents, treat me differently ...
(WCTV) - The Fair Housing Act was passed on April 11, 1968, banning discrimination in real estate and ... gap shows that white homeownership is nearly 30 percent higher than Black homeownership.