The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

From people and firms desperate for aid, one question: When?

- By Josh Boak

BALTIMORE » It’s been two weeks since President Donald Trump signed into law a $2.2 trillion economic rescue package that will distribute money to struggling individual­s and businesses. It feels like a lot longer than that to James Stearns of Gulfport, Mississipp­i.

His job installing vinyl floors was reduced to just one day a week because of the coronaviru­s outbreak. He’s barely sleeping. The April rent on his trailer is past due. Unless the combined $2,400 that he and his wife are to receive from the rescue package arrives soon, they and their two chihuahuas will be homeless.

“I’m fixing to be evicted — I can’t pay anything,” said Stearns, 52. “I don’t even have power right now. Hot as it is, we’re sitting here sweating to death.”

The administra­tion is in a race against time, trying to provide families and businesses with enough money to survive the devastatin­g economic plunge caused by the pandemic. Neither the White House nor the Treasury Department could say when asked late last week how much of the $2.2 trillion has actually reached needy Americans. Economists have said that the cash infusions will be crucial for sustaining the world’s largest economy.

The task of injecting this much cash into the entire country on a scale never before attempted is monumental. And it’s urgent: One in 10 U.S. workers lost their jobs in the past three weeks. Half of working households say they’ve lost income. The economy is expected to shrink at a shocking 30% annual rate in the April-June quarter.

“There is no way we could have been operationa­lly prepared to put this much money into the economy immediatel­y,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget, which has long advocated for fiscal restraint but supported the rescue package.

The $290 billion in checks to individual­s is just starting to flow and might go out in meaningful sums beginning Monday, according to comments by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and a memo from the IRS. About a third of the $349 billion for preserving small businesses’ payrolls has been approved. But the government hasn’t said how much money has actually gone to those employers so far.

The major airlines, seeking $25 billion to cover their payroll expenses, are still negotiatin­g with Treasury over the terms. It remains unclear whether the government will proceed with a plan to take ownership stakes in the airlines in exchange for that aid.

Most states are still working to try to distribute the additional $600 a week in unemployme­nt benefits provided in the federal package, on top of state benefits. Overloaded, outdated computer systems are delaying the process in some states. There is also health and disaster spending, aid to state government­s, payroll tax credits and $510 billion in loans for large employers for which the guidelines are still unknown.

The roll-out of congressio­nal aid has been notably slow compared with the aggressive steps taken by the Federal Reserve, which quickly slashed its benchmark interest rate to near zero and offered $2 trillion in loans to businesses and state and local government­s. The Fed can shore up markets and instill confidence. But families and small businesses depend most on Congress for immediate help.

Larry Kudlow, Trump’s top economic adviser, argues that the distributi­on of rescue money has been moving in a timely manner.

“The extra $600 in the unemployme­nt benefits — that’s come online way faster than we originally thought,” Kudlow told Fox Business Network.

While a two-week delay to establish the distributi­on process won’t likely much deepen the damage to an already diminished economy, many small businesses will need the aid before a next wave of bills hits, said Richard Prisinzano, director of policy analysis at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Penn Wharton Budget Model.

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