- Average size of loans has dropped to $79,000 from $206,000
- Disparities among states narrows after second round of loans
Fresh figures from a government coronavirus relief program for small businesses that’s been criticized for giving loans to large companies and favoring certain states show that disparities in approvals among states have been largely eliminated, and suggest more smaller firms are getting loans.
The
The average loan size in the second round through May 1 dropped to $79,000 from $206,000 in the first round, the data show. That suggests more mom-and-pop shops with smaller payrolls are getting loans approved than in the initial round. Just over half of the $320 billion authorized for the program’s second round have been processed so far.
“The program is broadly based and assisting the smallest of small businesses,” Treasury Secretary
More Gudiance
Still, questions remain about how big banks are faring versus small lenders, as well as other concerns including borrowers and lenders
There are also concerns that the second round of funding won’t be enough, and Congress may need to provide more, White House economic adviser
“I don’t want to rule it out,” Kudlow said. “We waited a little bit too long, I thought, when the last tranche ran out. Let’s not make the same mistake again. We will be looking at that.”
The program launched April 3 and was billed as a way to help small businesses devastated by the outbreak keep workers employed and be ready to reopen. An initial $349 billion
But reports of big restaurant chains and hotel groups getting loans through a
New Rules
The data released Sunday show that lenders with less than $10 billion in assets accounted for 32% of the approved loan amount in the second round so far, and the percentage of loans of more than $5 million decreased after the SBA and Treasury took steps to ensure more small firms got their applications through.
The agencies issued a new rule on April 30 that limited to $20 million the value of loans that corporate groups can get, and the SBA changed how it accepted applications from lenders -- even
The SBA and Treasury
Almost 320 loans were received by public companies totaling $1.12 billion as of May 1, and 29 had been returned worth $183 million, according to data compiled by FactSquared.
State Disparities
States that got lower rates of approved loans in the first round are generally doing better than average during the second round, narrowing the gap between haves and have-nots. California small businesses got first-round loans worth just 38% of what they were eligible for under the program, and those in New York got 40%, according to estimates from
As of May 1, loans from both rounds of the program pushed the rates in California and New York to 75%, compared with 81% for the country overall.
The hardest-hit areas of the country got disproportionately less under the first round of the program, according to a recent study by researchers at the University of Chicago and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The authors, Joao Granja, Christos Makridis, Constantine Yannelis and Eric Zwick, analyzed loan data by congressional district that hasn’t been made public.
Some observers have suggested that businesses in the hardest-hit areas might have found the program less attractive because their outlook is so grim that re-opening and recovery seem less likely.
In that context, Sunday’s data may be an encouraging sign: There were more than twice as many loans to hard-hit states such as New York and New Jersey in the second round than in the first, suggesting strong demand.
Other researchers, including Granja’s group, put more emphasis on the idea that certain banks were more successful than others in processing PPP loans, and that areas with more of those banks benefited disproportionately from the program.
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Robert Friedman, Ros Krasny
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