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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA Wave of Small-Business Closures Is on the Way. Can Washington Stop It?
One of the great threats to the post-pandemic economy is becoming clear: Vast numbers of small and midsize businesses will close permanently during the crisis, causing millions of jobs to be lost.
The federal government moved with uncharacteristic speed to help those businesses enacting the Paycheck Protection Program, with $669 billion allocated so far.
But there is a problem. The structure of the program is not particularly well suited to the type of crisis that millions of businesses face. The program may have bought businesses some time, but in its current shape it will not enable many of them to remain solvent long enough to emerge from the other side of the pandemic in some viable form.
Rather, it is more tailored to what the crisis looked liked when shutdowns first took place in the olden times of March 2020, when it seemed that business closures would be a short-term blip and everyone might be able to get back to normal by summer.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/smallbusiness/a-wave-of-small-business-closures-is-on-the-way-can-washington-stop-it/ar-BB14pjcQ?li=BBnbfcN
SoonerPride
(12,286 posts)I contend they do not.
alwaysinasnit
(5,063 posts)and a wave of foreclosures starting next year when the forbearance terms on mortgages terminate with those amounts coming due. Not to mention, the wave of evictions because people have lost their jobs and their unemployment payments running out, with little or no prospects of getting a job. And then there is the wholesale looting of the Treasury which means that at least a relative few will be doing just fine. I guess I'm just being pessimistic.
crickets
(25,960 posts)keithbvadu2
(36,752 posts)Just so long as Trump's pals get their million$ while the little guys cannot get through the system easily.