Kuwait Times

US pandemic aid program saved 51.1m jobs

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WASHINGTON: A high-profile pandemic aid program protected about 51.1 million American jobs, the Trump administra­tion said on Monday, as it revealed how $521.4 billion in taxpayer cash was injected into small businesses but also into the pockets of the rich and famous.

The data on the small business Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) seemed to confirm worries among Democrats and watchdog groups that in addition to mom-and-pop shops, the funds went to well-heeled and politicall­y-connected companies, some of which were approved for between $5 million and $10 million. Those include several firms that lobby on public policy, such as Wiley Rein LLP and APCO Worldwide, as well as prominent law firms like Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP, which has represente­d President Donald Trump, and Boies Schiller Flexner LLP.

Kasowitz Benson Torres said the funding helped the law firm preserve hundreds of jobs at full salary at a time when federal courts and its offices were shut down.

The gallery of well-connected names extended deeply into the world of America’s privileged and super famous. Sidwell Friends School, an exclusive private school which educated former President Barack Obama’s daughters, was approved for between $5 million and $10 million, as was Saint Ann’s School in Brooklyn, which - with tuition exceeding $50,000 per year - is attended by the children of hedge fund managers and celebritie­s. Newsmax Media Inc, the media company run by Trump donor Christophe­r Ruddy, got the nod for between $2 million and $5 million. So did billionair­e rapper Kanye West’s Yeezy LLC clothing company. Newsmax said in a statement it was eligible for the program and did receive a loan, but declined to elaborate. Aside from Kasowitz Benson Torres and Newsmax, the other companies and schools did not

immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. “The initial data is revealing many recipients that are appropriat­ely raising eyebrows, which was one of the many reasons we wanted it public,” said Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight.

Detailed picture

The colossal data set released by the US Treasury Department and Small Business Administra­tion (SBA), after initial resistance, gives Americans their first full look at who got cash from the first-come-first-served PPP that has been dogged by technology, paperwork and fairness issues. To date, the SBA has released geographic­al distributi­on figures but the new data paints a much more detailed picture of which communitie­s and sub-sectors received support. Senior administra­tion officials hailed the program as a “wild success,” with the data showing it supported about 84 percent of all small business employees.

The data includes informatio­n on 660,000 loans of $150,000 or more, including recipient name, address, lender, business type, jobs retained, and some demographi­c informatio­n. That accounts for roughly 73 percent of the dollars granted, but only 14 percent of the 4.9 million loans, according to a summary of data the agencies released on Monday.

While the data does not say exactly how much money each borrower received, they are placed in one of five bands: $150,000-350,000; $350,000-1 million; $1-2 million; $2-5 million; and $5-10 million. More than 4,800 loans were issued in the top band, while the overall average loan size was $107,000, the data shows. Among those in the mix: the Americans for Tax Reform Foundation, whose stated mission is to curb government spending. It was approved for a loan of between $150,000 and $350,000. Despite some eyebrow-raising recipients, the funds reached a wide swath of businesses - more than $67 billion for the healthcare and social assistance sector, $64 billion-plus for constructi­on businesses, $54 billion for manufactur­ing and, at the smaller end, more than $7 billion for religious organizati­ons, the data showed.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had initially refused to name any recipients, saying it could expose borrowers’ proprietar­y business informatio­n. But under pressure from lawmakers, he agreed to shine a light on large borrowers. Launched in April, the unpreceden­ted program - which has been extended until Aug. 8 - allows small businesses hurt by the pandemic to apply for a forgivable government-backed loan from a lender.

More than 5,000 U.S. lenders participat­ed in the program, with JPMorgan accounting for $29 billion in loans. JPMorgan, Bank of America, Truist Bank, PNC Bank and Wells Fargo originated 17 percent of total PPP loans, according to the data. In the scramble to distribute funds, the program was beset by technology glitches, documentat­ion snags and revelation­s that some lenders prioritize­d their most profitable clients. Some investment firms, for example, were also on the list. That included Advent Capital Management LLC, a New York-based debt investor with $9 billion in assets; Metacapita­l Management LP, a New York-based fixed income investor with more than $1 billion in assets; and Semper Capital Management LP, which invests nearly $4 billion in mortgage-backed securities. Deepak Narula, the head of Metacapita­l, said his company decided it did not want the money and returned it “pretty quickly.”

 ?? —Reuters ?? NEW YORK: A woman runs past the Charging Bull sculpture in the Financial District in the Manhattan borough of New York.
—Reuters NEW YORK: A woman runs past the Charging Bull sculpture in the Financial District in the Manhattan borough of New York.

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