The Pak Banker

US lenders, businesses brace for disclosure on small business pandemic aid

- WASHINGTON -AP

Americans will soon get a first full look at which businesses received $515 billion of taxpayer funds when the government, after initial resistance by President Donald Trump's administra­tion, releases borrower data for one of its highest- profile pandemic aid efforts.

The colossal data set for the Paycheck Protection Program, to be released by the Treasury Department and Small Business Administra­tion in the coming days, will provide transparen­cy for a first-comefirst- served program that from the outset was plagued by technology, paperwork and fairness issues.

That could make life uncomforta­ble for borrowers that broke the spirit or letter of the rules, and for banks that shoveled the money out the door. The aim of the $660 billion program was to help cash-strapped companies keep workers employed and make rent. "There's a level of anxiety," said Suzie Saxman, a partner at Chicago-based law firm Seyfarth Shaw. "I've said to everybody: Prepare to be disclosed, prepare to be audited."

The Treasury and SBA said they will release a swath of informatio­n, including the names, addresses, loan amount ranges and jobs supported for businesses that received $150,000 or more. That should account for roughly 75% of the dollars granted, but only 15% of the 4.7 million loans.

The agencies have not said when they will release the data. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin initially refused to release the data, saying it included proprietar­y business informatio­n. But under pressure from lawmakers, he agreed to shine a light on large borrowers.

"The opportunit­ies for waste, mismanagem­ent, abuse and corruption are enormous, and we just can't know unless we have the informatio­n," said Lisa Gilbert, executive vice president at the Washington­based government watchdog group Public Citizen.

Launched in April, the program allows small businesses hurt by the pandemic to apply for a forgivable government-backed loan from a bank, the largest-ever of its kind.

In the scramble to distribute funds, the program was beset by technology glitches, documentat­ion snags and revelation­s that some banks prioritize­d their most profitable clients. As a result, more affluent companies got funds, while less well-heeled borrowers missed out.

Those revelation­s left lingering questions on whether the most needy benefited. To date, the SBA has released broad distributi­on figures for states, industries and the largest lenders. But the new data will paint a much more detailed demographi­c picture of which local communitie­s and subsectors received support and whether it helped save jobs.

While that is important data for economists and policy wonks, businesses and banks are preparing for more backlash.

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