This post was originally published on this site
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday signaled the Trump administration was interested in giving new life to a coronavirus aid program for small businesses but also making it more targeted, as he spoke at a House hearing about what may go in Washington’s next coronavirus aid package.
“A next phase of relief should extend the PPP, but on a more targeted basis for smaller companies and those that are especially hard hit, such as restaurants, hotels and other travel and hospitality businesses,” Mnuchin said, referring to the Paycheck Protection Program.
He also said that “certain industries, such as construction, are recovering quickly,” but travel and retail are facing longer-term challenges.
The Democratic-run House and Republican-run Senate are on break and largely away from Washington, D.C., but lawmakers are set to return Monday and ramp up their negotiations with the Trump administration over what will go in the federal government’s next big coronavirus relief package, which is now expected to become reality around early August.
Mnuchin’s comments came Friday morning during a hearing held by the House Small Business Committee. on the federal government’s coronavirus aid programs.
The PPP, which has received $670 billion in funding through April’s $484 billion relief package and March’s $2.2 trillion CARES Act, has drawn criticism over how public companies scored loans, as well as over sending money to less hard-hit areas and allegedly discriminating against businesses owned by women and minorities.
The program has provided about 5 million loans worth $518 billion, according to Small Business Administration data as of Thursday.
U.S. stocks SPX, +0.19% DJIA, -0.08% have rallied from their March lows thanks in part to optimism around Washington’s aid efforts, and the S&P 500 and Dow industrials on Friday were on track to post weekly gains.