El Dorado News-Times

New York Fed: Black-owned business hard hit by pandemic

- By Martin Crutsinger AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Black-owned businesses have been almost twice as likely to fail as businesses overall during the current pandemic, according to a study released Tuesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York

The study determined that a major reason for this was that Black-owned businesses are heavily concentrat­ed in cities that have been hardest hit by the virus and they entered the pandemic with weaker financial conditions.

The study found a “disturbing relationsh­ip” between areas that have been hard-hit by COVID-19 and the economic health of Blackowned businesses, said Clair Kramer Mills, assistant vice president of the New York Fed.

The Black-owned businesses “had weaker financial conditions, weaker bank relationsh­ips and preexistin­g funding gaps prior to the pandemic,”she noted.

The New York Fed study found that 40% of the revenue from Black-owned businesses is concentrat­ed in just 30 counties, roughly 1% of all the counties in the United States. And among these counties, about two-thirds are those that had the highest level of COVID-19 cases.

The report found that between April and June, nearly $521 billion in loans in the Paycheck Protection Program to support businesses had been distribute­d but that the support did not reach some of the hardest hit areas.

“Businesses in the hardest hit communitie­s have witnessed huge disparitie­s in access to federal relief funds and a higher rate of business closures,” Mills said.

The New York Fed report said that in the 30 counties where Black-owned businesses were seen as particular­ly susceptibl­e to closures, about 15% to 20% of the businesses received PPP loans.

The report said while those rates were not too different from the national business estimate of 17.7% of businesses receiving PPP loans, there was a much wider discrepanc­y in some areas.

Only 7% of businesses in the Bronx got PPP loans and just 11.3% of those in Queens, N.Y., and 11.6% in Wayne County, which includes Detroit, the report said.

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