Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Fed chair: New lending programs set to launch

Initiative­s for businesses, government­s to begin June 1

- By Christophe­r Rugaber and Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Tuesday that the Fed’s lending programs for medium-sized businesses and state and local government­s would begin operating by the end of this month.

Powell said that while the Fed has received a “good deal of interest” in those programs, if not enough companies or state and local government­s seek to borrow the Fed would consider changes to them. That could include expanding their eligibilit­y.

The chairman’s comments came before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, which held an oversight hearing on the $2 trillion federal relief package approved in late March.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who also testified, came under sharp questionin­g from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who charged that he wasn’t doing enough to force companies that receive aid from the joint Fed-Treasury program to keep workers on their payrolls.

“Will you require companies that receive money from this half-a-trillion-dollar slush fund to keep people on the payroll?” Warren asked.

The senator pressed Mnuchin to ensure that the loans include that requiremen­t. When Mnuchin declined to commit to that change, Warren said, “You’re boosting your Wall Street buddies.”

Mnuchin told Warren that the legislatio­n that provides the government aid includes restrictio­ns on top executive pay and on company dividends and stock buybacks.

The Fed’s Main Street Lending program, announced in March, will extend up to $600 billion in loans to companies with up to 15,000 employees. The Treasury has provided $75 billion to offset any losses from the loans, drawn from $454 billion that Congress provided Treasury to support Fed loans in the relief package.

Mnuchin said his department would accept losses from any Fed loans that would come out of that $454 billion. Mnuchin had previously said that the administra­tion expected to recover all those funds. That observatio­n had raised concerns that the Fed would adopt a cautious approach that would provide less financial support.

Mnuchin also defended the administra­tion’s support for reopening the economy in many states, which he said would be done safely.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat from Ohio, charged that the Trump administra­tion was risking the lives of poorer workers in its efforts to boost the economy and financial markets.

Brown asserted that the Trump administra­tion hasn’t done enough to protect lower-paid front-line workers even as most states start allowing restaurant­s, stores and gyms to reopen.

“The administra­tion wants to put more workers at risk to boost the stock market,” Brown said.

“Your characteri­zation is unfair,”

Mnuchin responded.

The Treasury secretary also noted that prolonged shutdowns of the economy would risk widespread business bankruptci­es and long-term unemployme­nt.

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