For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 15, 2004
Fact Sheet: Expanding Homeownership for All Americans
Presidential Action
- President Bush met with first-time homebuyers and housing
counselors in Ardmore, Pennsylvania to discuss his homeownership
initiative and aggressive agenda to dismantle the barriers to
homeownership.
- President Bush's housing agenda is producing real results. The
overall U.S. homeownership rate set a new record of 68.6% in the fourth
quarter -- its highest level ever. Since the President announced his
initiative in June 2002, the Census estimates an increase of 1.53
million minority homeowners. In the fourth quarter of 2003, data was
released showing that -- for the first time ever -- the majority of
minority households are now homeowners. The minority homeownership
rate set a new quarterly record of 50.6%, up 1.3 percentage points from
the third quarter.
- Signed into law by President Bush in December 2003, the American
Dream Downpayment Act, a fund to help approximately 40,000 families a
year with their down payment and closing costs, is set to begin helping
families early this spring.
- The strong housing market is beneficial for families across the
Nation. American families have been refinancing due to historically
low interest rates, reducing their mortgage payments by hundreds of
dollars a month.
Background on Presidential Action
President Bush's initiative to dismantle the barriers to
homeownership includes providing down payment assistance through the
American Dream Downpayment Initiative; increasing the supply of
affordable homes through the Single-Family Affordable Housing Tax
Credit; increasing support for the Self-Help Homeownership
Opportunities Program; and increasing home-buying education and
counseling. In June 2002, President Bush issued America's
Homeownership Challenge to the real estate and mortgage finance
industries to encourage them to join the effort to close the gap that
exists between the homeownership rates of minorities and
non-minorities. The President also announced the goal of increasing
the number of minority homeowners by at least 5.5 million families
before the end of the decade.
Return to this article at:
/news/releases/2004/03/20040315-3.html