Mnuchin, Powell hone in on need to aid U.S. small businesses
Send a link to a friend
[December 02, 2020]
By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Top U.S. economic
officials on Tuesday urged Congress to provide more help for small
businesses amid a surging coronavirus pandemic and concern that relief
from a vaccine may not arrive in time to keep them from failing.
"These businesses cannot wait two or three months," Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin said during a hearing before the Senate Banking
Committee, urging lawmakers to put as much as $300 billion into grants
for struggling businesses.
His comments came amid some renewed momentum for a pandemic aid package,
with Republicans and Democrats acknowledging the next few weeks will be
critical in determining whether the country's better-than-expected
recovery can be coaxed along until the impact of the pending vaccine is
felt -- or will weaken as benefits to families expire and the
coronavirus continues spreading.
Mnuchin on Tuesday is to hold his first talks since the election with
House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and a bipartisan group of
senators has proposed a $900 billion bill that includes an extension of
federal unemployment benefits.
At its peak over the summer, expanded federal unemployment benefits
funneled some $12 billion weekly into individual bank accounts, money
that propped up spending, padded savings accounts, and fueled rehiring
as some parts of the economy bounced back faster than expected.
The expiration of those benefits by the end of this year has prompted
calls for a more extended safety net while the vaccine is rolled out.
"We can see the end, we just need to get there," Fed Chair Jerome Powell
said of the pandemic and associated recession that decimated the U.S.
economy in the spring and has still left it about 10 million jobs shy of
where it was in February.
[to top of second column]
|
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies before the Senate
Banking Committee hearing on "The Quarterly CARES Act Report to
Congress" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 1, 2020.
Susan Walsh/Pool via REUTERS
"People that are in public-facing jobs, in public-facing industries
- they may see the light at the end of the tunnel the middle of next
year ... They may need more help to get there," Powell said,
referring to restaurants, hotels and entertainment venues that have
been the hardest hit by the pandemic.
Job losses in those industries have fallen most heavily on women and
minorities.
There was partisan bickering at the hearing on some points,
particularly over Mnuchin's decision to shut several Federal Reserve
emergency lending programs at the end of this month, a move
Democrats said seemed to contradict his call to help businesses that
might have borrowed from those programs.
Democrats and Fed officials want those programs left open if only as
a precaution, so small businesses, local governments and
corporations can raise money if the pandemic and ongoing recession
worsen in the weeks ahead.
But Powell also agreed with Mnuchin that at this point businesses
may need outright grants from the government, not to pile on more
debt. He also agreed that a separate Treasury fund could be used by
the incoming administration of President-elect Joe Biden to
re-establish the Fed lending programs if they are needed.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Aurora Ellis, Tom Brown,
Chizu Nomiyama and Paul Simao)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|