Affiliation:
1. Aalto University and Helsinki Graduate School of Economics
2. Freddie Mac
3. University of Pittsburgh and NBER
Abstract
Abstract
This paper studies how the expansion of segregated neighborhoods eroded black wealth in prewar American cities. Using a novel sample of matched addresses, we find that over a single decade rental prices soared by roughly 50 percent on city blocks that transitioned from all white to majority black. Meanwhile, pioneering black families paid a 28 percent premium to buy a home on a majority white block, after which their homes lost 10 percent of their value. These findings strongly suggest that segregated housing markets cost black families much of the gains associated with moving north during the Great Migration.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
9 articles.
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