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C. L. Escalante, A. Osinubi, C. Dodson, C.E. Taylor (2018)
Looking beyond farm loan approval decisions: Loan pricing and non‐pricing terms for socially disadvantaged farm borrowers, 50
T.P. Boehm, P.D. Thistle, A. Schlottmann (2006)
Rates and race: An analysis of racial disparities in mortgage rates, 17
P. Cheng, Z. Lin, Y. Liu (2015)
Racial discrepancy in mortgage interest rates, 51
C. L. Escalante, R. Brooks, J. E. Epperson, F. E. Stegelin (2006)
Credit risk assessment and racial minority lending at the farm service agency, 38
C.L. Escalante, J.E. Epperson, U. Ragunathan (2009)
Gender bias claims in farm service agency's lending decisions, 34
J. Ghimire, C.L. Escalante, R. Ghimire, C. Dodson (2020)
Do farm service agency borrowers’ double minority labels lead to more unfavorable loan packaging terms?, 80
W.H. Greene (2012)
Econometric analysis
X. Bustillo (2021)
Rampant issues’: Black farmers are still left out at USDA
C. K. Dhakal, C. L. Escalante, C. Dodson (2019)
Heterogeneity of farm loan packaging term decisions: a finite mixture approach
J. Feder, T. Cowan (2013)
Garcia v. Vilsack: A policy and legal analysis of a USDA discrimination case
This study presents evidence on the relative accommodation of credit requests made by minority start‐up entrepreneurs in the U.S. farm sector. Loan packaging terms (amount, interest rate, and maturity) prescribed by lending officers of the Farm Service Agency, the government's lending arm to the farm sector, are analyzed and compared across racial/ethnic and gender groups of borrowers. The intention is to discern whether prescribed loan terms are favorable and supportive of the new farms' business growth and survival goals and uncover any trends of preferential treatment for certain groups of borrowers. Econometric results did not uncover any significant deviations in the lenders' decisions for beginning African American and White farmers for all three components of the loan package. While most packaging term decisions were similar among borrowers of different racial/ethnic attributes, the only exceptional terms were significantly larger loan amounts for American Indians and higher interest rates for Hispanic Americans. Compared to farmers in the South, loan term decisions seem to align with regional concentrations of farm typologies, such as the prevalence of livestock operations in the Plains and Midwest that require longer loan repayment periods and larger crop farms in the West with higher loan amount approvals.
The American Journal of Economics and Sociology – Wiley
Published: May 29, 2023
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