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Capital Flows & Disparities for Cities, Counties, and States

We analyzed the dollar flows of investments at the neighborhood level (defined here as census tracts) using the following data sources:

  • Single-family: Purchase loans for owner-occupied single-family properties of one to four units, as reported by Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data for 2005–19. We scale single-family investment by the number of owner-occupied households so we can make apples-to-apples comparisons across places and across neighborhoods within a place.

  • Multifamily: Purchase loans for multifamily properties of five or more units, as reported by Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data for 2005–19. We scale multifamily investment by the number of renter-occupied households living in properties with five or more units.

  • Nonresidential: Loans for nonresidential real estate (e.g., commercial, industrial, and agricultural properties), as tracked by CoreLogic for 2005–18. We scale nonresidential investment by the number of employees working in the area.

  • Small business: Small business loans, as measured by loans to businesses with revenues below $1 million, reported by bank lenders pursuant to Community Reinvestment Act requirements for 2005–19 and as measured by Small Business Administration guaranteed lending through the 7(a) and 504 programs. We scale small business investment by the number of small business employees.

  • Mission: “Mission lending” reported by community development financial institutions (CDFIs) and other socially motivated lenders, compiled from various data sources including transaction- level reports from the CDFI Fund, data reported to the Opportunity Finance Network, and mission loans identified in CoreLogic datasets, as well as investments under the New Markets Tax Credit program; data are for 2005–18. We scale mission investment by the number of households.

  • Federal: Federal community development funding including HUD HOME and CDBG grants, Low-Income Housing Tax Credit investments, HOPE VI Public and Indian Housing Program and Main Streets Program grants, Choice Neighborhood grants, and EPA brownfields and brownfields redevelopment grants for 2005–18. We scale federal investment by the number of households.

  • Overall: The sum of all the above types of investment, scaled by the number of households.
    We ranked the scaled investment volume for each city among the 250* largest cities, for each county among the 250* largest counties, and for each state among all 50 states (excluding data from very small counties in those states). We presented how those places compare with their peers in percentiles between 1 and 100 for each investment category and overall; higher percentiles mean more investment.

To evaluate how equitably investment is distributed across neighborhoods within each city, county, and state, we ran a statistical regression analysis of how strongly neighborhood race/ethnicity demographics and poverty rates relate to the scaled amount of investment they receive. For example, in a city where having a high neighborhood poverty rate strongly predicts that the neighborhood will receive a low amount of investment, we say there are income-associated investment disparities in that city. In a city where having a large share of people of color in a neighborhood strongly predicts that the neighborhood will receive a low amount of investment, we say there are racial/ethnic investment disparities in that city. We presented how each city’s, county’s, and state’s investment compared with its peers in racial/ethnic and income equity in percentiles between 1 and 100 for each investment category and overall; higher percentiles mean more equitable investment.

Because a neighborhood’s racial/ethnic and income composition changes over time, we used multiple years of Census demographic and income data to analyze investment trends, looking at the demographics of the neighborhood during the year the investment occurred. We included racial/ethnic groups in a city, county, or state’s regression where those demographic groups make up at least 5 percent of the population in at least 20 tracts within that place. We trimmed the top 3 percent of outlier scaled investment flows before calculating regression results for race/ethnicity and income equity.

*We do not include a city or county if more than 80 percent of its population is made up of any singular racial/ethnic group as this creates data accuracy issues when calculating racial disparities.

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FieldValue
Modified
2021-05-20
Release Date
2021-05-13
Identifier
13d01e0e-11eb-4102-92f7-b94f36e07c84
License
Author
Brett Theodos, Eric Hangen, Brady Meixell, and Jein Park
Contact Name
Urban Institute
Contact Email
Public Access Level
Public
These fields are specific to Urban Institute.
FieldValue
Data Dictionary Files
Geographic Level
Original Data Source
Cost
$0.00
Urban Publications
Citation Requirements

Urban Institute. 2021. Capital Flows & Disparities for Cities, Counties, and States. Accessible from https://datacatalog.urban.org/dataset/capital-flows-disparities-cities-c.... Data originally sourced from Gauging Investment Patterns across the US, developed at the Urban Institute, and made available under the ODC-BY 1.0 Attribution License.