Business & Economy

On The Money: Sweeping COVID-19, spending deal hits speed bumps | Deal set to include smaller stimulus checks, jobless benefit support | Biden, Powell praise progress toward agreement

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THE BIG DEAL—Sweeping COVID-19, spending deal hits speed bumps: Negotiations over a $900 billion coronavirus relief bill are running into 11th-hour snags, threatening to push Congress into a rare weekend session.

Lawmakers had hoped to clinch a sweeping deal, which would also fund the government through Oct. 1, on Wednesday after the top four congressional leaders signaled that they were closing in on an agreement following months of stalemate. 

But instead, lawmakers and staff warned that — while they still thought they would get the agreement — the final stages of the talks are moving slowly as they continue to haggle over details and field requests for changes.

“It’s still a ways off, I think. They’ve still got some things they’re negotiating. … It’s been a slow roll so far,” said Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 Republican in the upper chamber, after he left the Capitol following the Senate’s final votes of the day. The Hill’s Jordain Carney tells us why here.

Senate and House leaders were on the cusp of a coronavirus relief deal that will include $600 to $700 direct stimulus payments and $300-per-week supplemental unemployment assistance, according to sources familiar with the talks.

The Hill’s Scott Wong and Alexander Bolton tell us more about the package here.

The details: 

The prognosis: The head of the House Democratic Caucus predicted Wednesday that the party will rally behind the emerging coronavirus relief package with “strong support” from Democrats despite some liberal grumbling that the aid being discussed is insufficient.  

Yet the package may be hard to swallow for liberal Democrats, who had demanded hundreds of billions of dollars to help state and local governments pay their front-line workers, only to see that funding stripped from the package altogether. The Hill’s Mike Lillis has additional reporting on that dynamic here.

Read more on the push for a COVID-19 deal: 

 

LEADING THE DAY

Millions have fallen into poverty amid pandemic, study finds: Nearly 8 million Americans have fallen into poverty since June due to a combination of rising coronavirus cases and dwindling federal support, according to a study released Wednesday by economists at the University of Chicago and the University of Notre Dame.

The national poverty rate rose by 2.4 percentage points from 9.3 percent in June to 11.7 percent in November, putting 7.8 million people below the poverty line, according to the paper from Notre Dame’s James X. Sullivan, Chicago’s  Bruce D. Meyer and Jeehoon Han of Zhejiang University.

“The entire decline in poverty through June can be accounted for by the one-time stimulus checks the federal government issued, predominantly in April and May, and the expansion of unemployment insurance eligibility and benefits. In fact, in absence of these programs, poverty would have risen sharply,” they wrote. Read more on the study here.

The troubling new data comes as the White House and Congress race to strike a deal on a follow-up to the CARES Act and prevent millions more Americans from falling into poverty or deeper financial hardship. And the study was far from the only warning sign released Wednesday.

 

Stung by Trump, Fed chief gets fresh start with Biden: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell may finally catch a break from White House pressure and major disputes with the administration when President-elect Joe Biden takes over in January. 

Powell, however, is unlikely to face a constant barrage of attacks from Biden — an institutionalist intensely focused on bipartisanship. Fed experts say Powell’s strong rapport with his predecessor and Treasury Secretary nominee Janet Yellen gives him a sympathetic partner deeply knowledgeable about the ins and outs of the central bank.

“I think Powell will find sailing the sea of monetary policy much easier with the strong tailwind from the Biden administration behind him,” said David Beckworth, senior research fellow at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center and a former Treasury Department economist.

I explain why here.

 

GOOD TO KNOW

 

ODDS AND ENDS