The Pak Banker

US congressio­nal hearing may spotlight Powell, Mnuchin split over lending

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US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell appear together before a congressio­nal panel on Tuesday in a hearing likely to highlight divisions over what more needs to be done in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

With a vaccine on the horizon but coronaviru­s case rates surging and large parts of the economy still suffering, U.S. policymake­rs are divided over whether a full-on crisis response remains needed or whether further help should be more narrowly targeted to unemployed families and small business.

Congress itself has been deadlocked over how much more to do, even as millions of unemployed workers face the possible loss of unemployme­nt insurance benefits later this month. While a vaccine may speed the recovery and job creation next year, getting there could be difficult if large numbers of families run out of cash following the flood of government support approved earlier this year.

The issue has caused a rare public split between Mnuchin and Powell that is likely to be fleshed out at the hearing. Mnuchin has told the Fed to shutter, as of Dec. 31, a series of emergency lending programs for small businesses and local government, and return any unused money to the Treasury.

Powell has said he would comply, but also that he would prefer the programs be extended until the recovery has progressed further and it is clearer how the health crisis will evolve. Members of the Senate Banking Committee have split along largely partisan lines over the issue. Republican­s have agreed with Mnuchin that some of the Fed's crisis programs could be safely ended at this point and the money put to other uses; Democrats have argued Mnuchin is trying to narrow the choices available to Democratic President-elect Joe Biden and his nominee to succeed Mnuchin, former Fed chair Janet Yellen.

The hearing is the latest quarterly review of the implementa­tion of the multitrill­ion- dollar CARES Act approved last spring to bolster the economy from the impact of the pandemic and a wave of business closures that flowed from it. A House committee will hold a similar hearing on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Neera Tanden, President-elect Joe Biden's outspoken nominee to head the Office of

Management and Budget, faces a challenge winning Senate confirmati­on after a Washington career in which she has crossed powerful figures on both the right and left.

Biden unveiled many of his top economic nominees on Monday, including Treasury Secretary nominee Janet Yellen.

Tanden, 50, chief executive of the left-leaning Center for American Progress (CAP) think tank, and a longtime aide to former Secretary of State and 2016 Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton, would be the first woman of color to lead the OMB, which acts as the gatekeeper for the $4 trillion federal budget.

Republican Senator Tom Cotton called Tanden "a partisan hack" on Twitter for once referring to Republican Senator Susan Collins as "the worst." Tanden is "unfit to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate," he wrote.

She has "zero chance" of being confirmed, warned Drew Brandewie, communicat­ions director for Republican Senator John Cornyn, because of her "endless stream of disparagin­g comments about the Republican senators whose votes she'll need."

 ?? -REUTERS ?? Residents and politician­s attend a ceremony to commemorat­e five people, including a baby, killed by a drunk man who ploughed a speeding car into a pedestrian area in German city.
-REUTERS Residents and politician­s attend a ceremony to commemorat­e five people, including a baby, killed by a drunk man who ploughed a speeding car into a pedestrian area in German city.

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