The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Congress’ rescue aid: Adose of support, but is it enough?

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON » The $ 900 billion economic relief package that emerged from Congress over the weekend will deliver vital aid to millions of households and businesses that have been struggling for months to survive.

Yet with the economy still in the grip of a pandemic that has increasing­ly tightened curbs on business activity, more federal support will likely be needed soon.

And it’s unclear whether or when the government might provide it.

For now, thepackage that congressio­nal leaders agreed to Sundaywill provide urgently needed benefits to the unemployed, loans to help small businesses stay openandup to$ 600 in cashpaymen­ts tomost individual­s. Itwill also help families facing evictions remain in their homes. The measure includes no budgetary help, though, for states and localities that are being forced to turn to layoffs and service cuts as their tax revenue dries up — a potential long- run drag on the economy.

Months from now, economists say, the widespread distributi­on and use of vaccines could potentiall­y unleash a robust economic recovery as the virus is quashed, businesses reopen, hiring picks up and consumers spend freely again. Until then, though, the limited aid Congress has agreed to won’t likely be enough to stave off hardships formany households and small companies, especially if lawmakers balk at enacting further aid early next year.

And a widening financial gap between the affluent and disadvanta­ged households is likely to worsen.

“Some aid is better than no aid,” said Gregory Daco, chief U. S. economist at Oxford Economics, a consulting firm. “It’s positive. But it’s likely going to be insufficie­nt to bridge the gap from today until late spring or early summer when the health situation fully improves.”

President- elect Joe Biden has said he will seek another relief package soon after his inaugurati­on next month, setting up another political fight, given that some Senate Republican­s have said that with vaccines on the way, they think further government aid may be unnecessar­y.

The new rescue support offers less aid than Democrats had pushed for and much less than was provided in a multi- trillion dollar package for households and businesses that the government enacted inmarch. A new supplement­al federal jobless benefit, for example, was set at $ 300 a week — half the amount provided in March— and will expire in 11 weeks.

An extension of a benefits program for jobless people who have exhausted their regular

state benefits and for selfemploy­ed and gig workers will also be extended until mid- March, well before the economy is likely to have fully recovered.

“It’s not as if in March there’s suddenly going to be a light switch that’s turned on and we’re back in preCOVID mode,” Daco said.

Yet the new aid package may be enough, for now, to prevent another recession. S& P Global estimates that the money should help boost the U. S. economy back to its pre- pandemic level by the July- September quarter of next year — seven months or so from now. Without any support, that level wouldn’t have been reached until 2022, S& P estimates.

The economy has been enduring a renewed slump as the resurgent virus has intensifie­d pressure on businesses and consumers have stopped shopping, traveling, dining out and attending sports and entertainm­ent events. Key measures of the economy — retail sales, applicatio­ns for jobless aid, travel spending — have steadily weakened.

More than 9 million Americans had faced a total cutoff of their unemployme­nt benefits if Congress hadn’t agreed to the new package after months of stalemate. More than 4 million have already used all the unemployme­nt aid available to them, which lasts 26 weeks in most states; they will be able to reapply.

They includewar­ren Calvert, who ran out of unemployme­nt benefits about twomonths ago, and is several months behind on his electric bill. In the spring, Calvert lost what he considered the best job he ever had: A $ 15- an- hour concession cook at the Fiserv Forum arena in Milwaukee, where thenba’s Bucks play.

Now, Calvert and his girlfriend, who also lost a serving job at Fiserv, are trying tomanage by selling homemade eggrolls around their neighborho­od. To try to stay on top of his rent, he sells the eggrolls — original fusion concoction­s like chili or cheese steak — at all hours of the day and night. With little money left over for other food, they mostly eat egg rolls themselves.

“It’s really still hard — I’m still struggling day by day,” Calvert, 38, said. “Ain’t nobody feeling Christmasy right now. Who’s buying presents? I’m going to put up some lights, and that’s it.”

The much larger rescue package that the government enacted in March was widely credited with averting a disaster. Be injecting money quickly into the pockets of individual Americans, it served to reduce poverty. But as much of that aid expired over the summer, poverty grew. Many people ran through the $ 1,200 direct payment checks that had been distribute­d in April and May.

And a supplement­al $ 600 in jobless benefits expired over the summer.

According to research by Bruce Meyer at the University of Chicago and two colleagues, the U. S. poverty rate jumped from 9.3% in June to 11.7% in November — an increase of nearly 8 million people.

The new economic relief package restores the Paycheck Protection Program, which offers forgivable loans to many businesses. But many small businesses complain that the program in the past was too restrictiv­e, requiring them to use most of the money on payroll and not enough for other expenses like rent, the cost of personal protective equipment, or other supplies.

According to the data firm Womply, about one in five small businesses have closed since early spring. More than half of small businesses have just two months’ cash on hand or less, and one in six has two weeks or less of cash, according to a survey by the Census Bureau.

Most economists say that any further aid for small businesses should be mostly focused on keeping them alive, rather thanmainta­ining payrolls. If a business shuts down, they note, it can’t re- hire once the pandemic is under control.

Sasha Coleman, one of three worker- owners of a co- op restaurant near Boston named Tanam, said they are barely surviving the coronaviru­s recession. They’re relying on takeout food and cocktails that are generating less than onefifth of pre- pandemic revenue.

The restaurant, which closed from March to September, received a small business loan from the PPP program. But like many small companies, Coleman and her co- workerowne­rs would prefer something that lasts longer and is more flexible. The PPP requiredmo­st of the proceeds to be spent on payroll for just eight weeks.

They need to pay rent, maintain their health insurance and help offset the expenses they absorbed for adapting to takeout and outdoor dining, like buying patio furniture and outdoor heaters.

“It’s just been very frustratin­g because there is this expectatio­n to stay open and put on a good face for the customers, without much help from the government,” said Kyisha Davenport, another workerowne­r.

Democrats had wanted the new economic relief package to include about $ 160 billion in aid for state and local government­s. But Senate Republican­s opposed it. States and cities have already cut about 1.3 million jobs since the pandemic began, contributi­ng to a higher unemployme­nt rate.

Speaking at a news conference last week, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned that millions of people are urgently in need of federal rescue aid to carry them through the next several months until an economic recovery can be sustained.

“Now that we can see the light at the end of the tunnel,” Powell said, referring to the new vaccines, “it would be bad to see people losing their business, their life’s work in many cases, or even generation­s worth of work because they couldn’t last another few months.”

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM— ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020, file photo, Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, of Kentucky, speaks during a news conference with other Senate Republican­s on Capitol Hill in Washington, while Sen. John Barrasso, R- Wyoming, listens at left. “There will be another major rescue package for the American people,” Mcconnell said in announcing an agreement for a relief bill, Sunday, Dec. 20, 2020, that would total almost $ 900billion. “It is packed with targeted policies to help struggling Americans who have already waited too long.”
NICHOLAS KAMM— ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020, file photo, Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, of Kentucky, speaks during a news conference with other Senate Republican­s on Capitol Hill in Washington, while Sen. John Barrasso, R- Wyoming, listens at left. “There will be another major rescue package for the American people,” Mcconnell said in announcing an agreement for a relief bill, Sunday, Dec. 20, 2020, that would total almost $ 900billion. “It is packed with targeted policies to help struggling Americans who have already waited too long.”

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