Eakinomics: In
Defense of the PPP
It is a poorly held secret that a primary purpose of Eakinomics is primal
scream therapy to address my policy demons. I’ve already opined on the vast
misunderstanding of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) created by the
Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. As the public shaming and Monday-morning
quarterbacking continues, however, there is a growing story line that PPP
is a “failure.” This narrative has caused me to suffer an outrage
relapse.
Stop it! PPP is the best part
of the CARES Act.
It’s not that PPP is without flaws; it has numerous weak points. But
despite those flaws it has done an enormous amount of good. The table below
is taken from Thomas Wade’s PPP tracking
work for AAF. It displays the cumulative number of loans,
value of loans, and number of lenders in the PPP. Round 1 refers to dollars
provided in CARES, while Round 2 funds came from the subsequent Paycheck
Protection Program Increase Act.
There are two main takeaways from the table. First and most striking: In
one month PPP distributed $531 billion. That is nothing short of
extraordinary. It is also the single largest source of support for the
economy during the awful month of April. The lending facilities created at
the Federal Reserve and backed by Treasury funds have hardly begun to
function. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) put the total price tag for checks to
individuals at $293 billion and $268 billion for unemployment insurance –
and not all of that money has gone out yet.
The second important takeaway is the average loan size in the third line.
As time has progressed, the cumulative average loan size has steadily
fallen. This decline means that new loans are steadily smaller; the average
loan size has fallen from $239,00 in the first week to $73,000 in the most
recent data. The PPP is well beyond serving only “big” firms and is
now reaching increasingly smaller ventures.
This performance notwithstanding, the economy shed 20 million jobs in
April. Can you imagine the further carnage if PPP were the awful
corruption-ridden, poorly targeted program that people are suggesting?
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