Fed's Barr aims to 'eradicate' racial discrimination in banking

The Federal Reserve's top regulator wants to "eradicate discrimination" from the financial services sector and he's ready to use all the tools at his disposal to do so.

Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr delivered a speech on financial inclusion Tuesday afternoon at Jackson State University, a historically Black research university in Mississippi. In it, he said the central bank would incorporate screening for discriminatory practices into all of its supervision practices, including evaluating applications for mergers and acquisitions.

"Congress provided regulators with supervisory and enforcement tools to help ensure that supervised firms resolve consumer protection weaknesses as well as the more pervasive risk management issues that often lead to those weaknesses," Barr said. "We have a close working relationship with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and other regulators and integrate other regulators' consumer-focused reviews—such as examinations for unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices, as well as fair lending—into our assessments of bank holding companies, including in the context of applications for mergers and acquisitions."

Michael Barr
Michael Barr, vice chair for supervision at the Federal Reserve, said Tuesday that the central bank and other regulators are working to further bridge the racial wealth gap and "eradicate" discrimination in lending.
Bloomberg News

During his prepared remarks, Barr highlighted racial wealth gaps, the difficulties Black-owned small businesses have in obtaining credit and the fact that Black households are nearly six times as likely to be unbanked as their white counterparts. He said many of these issues are part of the "long shadow" of past discriminatory practices at banks and policies set by the U.S. government.

"For most of our country's history, the United States government and many state and local governments, as well as many private individuals, corporations, and organizations, did not merely fail to protect minorities from discrimination, they actively reinforced segregation, entrenched inequality, and enforced unequal policies," he said, "including through brutal violence."

Barr pointed to auto and small-business lending as areas of top concern for bank regulators, noting the Black borrowers have faced higher interest rates and more restricted access to these products than their white peers. 

He also expressed concerns around mortgage lending, singling out residential appraisals as an area of keen focus for the Fed and other regulators, picking up on a subject that has been a top priority for the Biden administration in its effort to root out systemic racial inequity. 

Barr nodded to the Fed's participation in a hearing on appraisal bias held by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council's Appraisal Subcommittee last month, saying: "I look forward to working with my fellow regulators to help ensure that individuals are treated equally in the appraisal process regardless of race or the racial composition of neighborhoods." 

The central bank sits on the council alongside other bank and housing regulatory agencies, including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. 

Barr said the Fed will lean on enhanced data collection to identify discriminatory practices by banks and craft policies accordingly. He noted that under section 1071 of the Dodd-Frank Act, banks should be reporting more data on small business lending. Once this provision is fully implemented, he said, the Fed will have "tangible insights into the availability and pricing of credit" being extended to Black-owned businesses.

At the same, Barr also encouraged banks to be proactive in identifying discriminatory practices, suggesting that they use "mystery shoppers" tests to evaluate their employee practices. This involves two people who have identical profiles except for a different protected class, such as race, both applying for similar loans. The idea is to test whether individuals receive different credit offerings based solely on their race, gender or personal attributes.

Another focal point for the Fed and other regulators, Barr said, will be the use of artificial intelligence or computer algorithms for determining credit scores or otherwise evaluating loan applications. 

Banks "should review the underlying models, such as their credit scoring and underwriting systems, as well as their marketing and loan servicing activities, just as they should for more traditional models," he said. 

The CFPB also expressed skepticism about the ability of AI and algorithmic evaluation models to adhere to fair- lending standards.

Barr said ongoing efforts to update the Fed's supervision and regulation policies on bank mergers and the Community Reinvestment Act will both prioritize access to financial services for low- and moderate- income communities. 

He added that it is also important for regulators to encourage innovations that help banks extend services to traditionally underserved areas, especially as it relates to community development financial institutions and minority depository institutions, which he said provide services traditional banks cannot. 

"One thing we do is make sure that our examiners understand the CDFI space and the MDI space and the role that CDFIs and MDIs play, and the particular kinds of circumstances that MDIs and CDFIs face such as being able to do small consumer loans and to do character lending and to lend to people without a credit score," Barr said during a question and answer session after his speech. "Our examiner's need to know and understand what the offsetting risk mitigation measures that CDFIs and MDIs are using, including knowing the family. It makes a difference."

Barr also said the Fed is doing its part to help facilitate better services for low-income and underserved customers, noting specifically its instant payments network, FedNow, which is due to roll out this summer. He said FedNow will enable faster services at lower costs to consumers.

"We can also make a difference by updating our rules on check clearance, so that consumers and small businesses still receiving checks have access to their funds in a timelier manner," Barr said. "And of course, we need strong consumer protections in place so that consumers don't have to worry about making payments in a safe way."

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Regulation and compliance Politics and policy Redlining
MORE FROM AMERICAN BANKER