New Homeownership Pathway Trades Down Payments For Financial Literacy
For decades, prospective low- and middle-income borrowers played by the rules and watched helplessly as archaic, racist lending formulas systematically squashed their hopes of homeownership.
No more.
On Sept. 19, Ready Life will launch a pilot program in Cleveland, Ohio, that reimagines the home buying process by replacing monetary down payments with comprehensive financial literacy education.
Traditional financial services solutions drain overlooked communities, perpetuating a cycle that siphons hard-earned dollars and hamstrings community reinvestment. By contrast, Ready Life’s people-focused homeownership program emphasizes a borrower’s cash flow and reimagines wealth generation and preservation strategies for underserved households long denied the financial stability – and investment vehicle – of homeownership.
Using technology, our efforts are mindfully designed to drive systemic change in the financial and housing sectors. Our Cleveland pilot program epitomizes our commitment to impactful community reinvestment by promoting financial inclusion and fostering scalable, sustainable economic growth for underserved communities nationwide.
In April, Construction Coverage data indicated that minority homeownership in Cleveland lagged white homeownership rates by 31%, making it the sixth-highest minority homeownership gap among large metros in the nation. Meanwhile, the typical value of Cleveland-area homes with Black owners is nearly 41% below that of homes with white owners. This is more than twice the national average of 18%.
In April 2023, Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies found that 1.1 million prospective homeowners of color nationwide earned enough income to cover a monthly mortgage payment for a moderately priced house in their communities but scraping together $25,000 for a down payment – the figure proposed by a failed 2021 congressional grant measure – was simply not possible. The research further estimated that removing the down payment requirement would boost Black homeownership by roughly 20%.
There’s no question that Ready Life’s homeownership program can be a part of filling this gap in Cleveland or that its scalability positions it for on-demand replication nationwide.
More importantly, though, we’re offering Cleveland families short on cash more than a quick fix. By partnering with Jatali Bellanton’s Brilliant Minds Unite, this program emphasizes financial literacy for the entire household with a focus placed on establishing sound financial habits early to maximize wealth-generation potential. This vital financial literacy component addresses Ready Life’s goal of breaking the cycle of poverty and helping prospective homeowners unlearn poor spending habits, ensuring that families are equipped with the knowledge to make informed financial decisions and secure their financial futures.
In turn, participating Cleveland families will be able to build up their traditional credit while they already have a home, relieving the key pressure point of housing insecurity and differentiating Ready Life’s approach from traditional rent-to-own models by providing participants with an asset they can leverage to reduce existing high-interest debt.
Being poor and middle class should not be expensive, and punishing people for their financial status when so many of its determining factors are outside of their control is a cruel and outdated approach. People should be rewarded for the value they bring to their families, their neighbors and their communities.
It’s far past time to reformulate the metrics dictating whose American dreams “deserve” to be realized, and we’re confident that Cleveland presents the perfect proving ground for reimagining homeownership.
Ashley Bell is the founder and CEO of financial services platform Ready Life, designed to create pathways for financial independence and homeownership without the use of credit scores. He is also board chairman and CEO of Redemption Holding Co., the Black-led investment group awaiting regulatory approval to finalize its purchase of Utah-based Holladay Bank & Trust and create the only Black-owned bank between Houston and Los Angeles.
SEE ALSO:
What is Teacherville? Non-Profit Creates Affordable Path To Homeownership For Black Educators
Top 10 Cities In America With The Largest Black Homeownership Gap
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