Kuwait Times

Tax cuts, reduced job benefits: Trump’s orders

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WASHINGTON: After failing to reach a deal with the US Congress for a fresh round of coronaviru­s pandemic relief, President Donald Trump signed a series of executive orders aimed at pumping up America’s pandemic-hit economy. The orders are likely to face some legal challenges.

Unemployme­nt relief

Trump’s order cuts enhanced federal unemployme­nt benefits - a lifeline for the tens of millions of Americans thrown out of work during the pandemic - from $600 to $400 per week. Democrats had been lobbying to extend the original $600 a week enhanced benefits, which expired on July 31. Trump proposes taking most of the money from the coffers of the Federal Emergency Management Agency - $44 billion, according to the order - with 25 percent of the money coming from states.

It’s not clear how Trump will convince state government­s, whose revenues have been hard hit by the crisis, to pony up their proposed share. Trump called the reduced payments “generous.”

A payroll tax cut

Trump’s first order waives the payroll tax that funds Social Security in a bid to inject extra money directly into salaried employees’ pockets. Trump has been pushing the idea for a while but it has found little support in Congress from Democrats or his fellow Republican­s.

The executive order says the cut comes into effect on Sept. 1, but Trump said it “most likely” would be retroactiv­e to Aug. 1 and translate into “bigger paychecks for working families.”

Evictions

Trump’s order protecting homeowners and renters from evictions is unlikely to face a challenge from Democrats; indeed, House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi this week encouraged the move. But it isn’t clear how it will be executed. The order directs authoritie­s to provide “temporary financial assistance” to renters and homeowners “struggling to meet their monthly rental or mortgage obligation­s.”

Even Trump seemed a little hazy on the order’s ultimate effects, saying “we don’t want people being evicted and the act that I am signing will solve that problem largely, hopefully, completely.”

Student loans

Trump said that interest on student loan payments frozen since March - would be suspended until the end of the year. —Reuters

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