Staying afloat: $2.2 trillion bill offers economic lifeline
Dr.
“We’ve reached out to many of our bigger vendors and said, ‘Hey, we may be facing a cash crunch — can you give us a break, or at least defer payments?’ Many have been sympathetic,” said Ticho, who owes loans on medical equipment. He’s giving his patients a break, too, by holding off for now on collecting their unpaid balances.
The record
The idea behind the legislation is to give companies and families a cash cushion to better weather the health crisis and looming recession. When it’s safe to go back to work, dine out and book airline tickets again, the thinking goes, they’ll be more financially ready to return to something closer to normal life.
“It will inject trillions of dollars of cash into the economy as fast as possible to help American workers, families, small businesses and industries make it through this disruption and emerge on the other side ready to soar,’’ said Senate Majority Leader
The payment is reduced by
The package would also help replace the earnings of unemployed workers for four months, providing them with their state’s unemployment benefits plus an extra
The support for individuals and households is especially important because the social safety net in America isn't as strong as it is in the wealthy developed countries of
The package includes
Also included is
At
And that doesn't count what else the Fed is doing. It has slashed its benchmark interest rate to zero. It's flooding financial markets with cash by buying up securities, including government and, for the first time, corporate bonds. It's also buying so-called commercial paper, short-term IOUs that companies issue to cover operating costs such as payrolls. And it's readying a loan program for small businesses.
Fed Chair
The chairman acknowledged that the economy will suffer and that unemployment will rise.
"There can also be a good rebound on the other side of that," he said. “By assuring the flow of credit in the economy and keeping rates low, we want to assure that that rebound, when it does come, is as vigorous as possible.”
“Except for wartime expenditures during World War II there is nothing comparable to this in
This rescue isn’t just bigger. It’s also different in significant ways.
In most economic downturns, even severe ones, policymakers aim at coaxing jittery consumers and businesses to start spending again by slashing interest rates, cutting taxes, or putting people to work on public works projects and giving them paychecks.
It’s not going to work that way this time. Nobody is going to go out shopping or schedule a cruise when they’re quarantined indefinitely inside their living rooms. And businesses aren’t going to hire, open new offices or invest in equipment when they aren’t collecting revenue because they have no customers.
Policymakers now just want to keep businesses and individuals from going under while the virus still rages, hoping they’ll be in shape to drive a recovery when the crisis is over.
“They’re truly focusing on stopping the system from freezing up,’’ said
For now, it seems, there’s no way to turn back the forces pulling the economy into recession for the first time in 11 years. Economists are expecting the April-June quarter to be the worst on record. The economy may plunge at an annual rate of 20% or more over those three months. Millions of Americans are expected to lose their jobs in the next few weeks. On Thursday, the
The rescue being cobbled together by the Fed, Congress and the
Blau is uneasy about seeking a loan from the
“Even something like
The scale of the damage is staggering. More than 180,000 stores are temporarily shuttered, accounting for more than 40% of
“Retailers were caught up in a nightmare,” said
No money is coming in at Olio, a wedding and event venue in
“They were very receptive. They have deferred payments except for interest and escrow for 90 days,” Narcus says. The business still has to pay other expenses including taxes and utilities.
To keep what could be a steep but short recession from turning into something worse, economists say the government needs to move fast.
But it won't be easy.
“No set of existing financial pipes was designed for a crisis requiring payments to more than 100 million individuals or households within days or weeks,’’ write
They are worried that the government will rely on income tax rolls to identify recipients; but many Americans, especially the poorest ones, don’t pay income taxes and can’t be found that way. They suggest using
“We urge policymakers to emphasize the need for speed,’’ Hammond and Wilcox write, even if it means some Americans accidentally get more than one relief check. “In most cases, the people who receive multiple payments will be at the lower end of the economic ladder and thus likely to be in great need of help.’’
Cornell’s Hyman expects that the government will make mistakes as it tries to roll out so much money, so quickly. But he’s impressed with the rescue package anyway.
“It’s the biggest intervention in human history, and it’s all done in a week,’’ he said. “It’s crazy.’’
Rosenberg reported from



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