Eakinomics: Financial
Support for Business in the Pandemic
One of the most successful aspects of the COVID-19 policy response has been
the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which quickly provided over
$500 billion in support to the business community, allowing them to retain
employee-employer relationships and supporting the infrastructure for
private sector payroll growth. At that point, however, policymakers seem to
have stopped focusing on the business sector. Today AAF will host its
inaugural virtual forum: “Assessing Financial
Support for Businesses During the Pandemic – The State of Play.” There are
a variety of pressing financial issues; AAF’s Thomas Wade provides a nice
overview and summary. To begin, it is six months
after the declaration of a national health emergency and still the Treasury
and Federal Reserve have done essentially nothing to offer relief using its
emergency lending programs. The Main Street Lending Program, in particular,
has provided only $2 billion of the $600 billion in funding it is capable
of backing.
In other areas, businesses face continued threats to their cash flow. For
example, most business interruption insurance policies explicitly exclude
viral events (a legacy of the SARS pandemic). There has been concern that the courts would
override these exclusions and impose a crippling liability on the insurance
industry. Even if that does not transpire, there is a good question as to
what is the best way to handle this issue in the future. Similarly, the
business community has expressed concern over the large potential
for lawsuits regarding COVID-19 infections generating a large financial
liability.
In each case, the ultimate policy remains unsettled. Please join AAF in hearing the
likely outlook from a distinguished panel of experts: Joel Griffith,
Research Fellow, Financial Regulations, Institute for Economic Freedom, The
Heritage Foundation; Sean Kevelighan, President and Chief Executive
Officer, Insurance Information Institute; and Hal Scott, Emeritus
Professor, Harvard Law School and President, Committee on Capital Markets
Regulation.
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