Stories Of Greed and Corruption: Large, Troubled Companies Got Bailout Money in Small-Business Loan Program

In Budget, Economy On
- Updated

A company in Georgia paid $6.5 million to resolve a Justice Department investigation — and, two weeks later, received a $10 million federally backed loan to help it survive the coronavirus crisis.

Another company, AutoWeb, disclosed last week that it had paid its chief executive $1.7 million in 2019 — a week after it received $1.4 million from the same loan program.

And Intellinetics, a software company in Ohio, got $838,700 from the government program — and then agreed, the following week, to spend at least $300,000 to purchase a rival firm.

The vast economic rescue package that President Trump signed into law last month included $349 billion in low-interest loans for small businesses. The so-called Paycheck Protection Program was supposed to help prevent small companies — generally those with fewer than 500 employees in the United States — from capsizing as the economy sinks into what looks like a severe recession.

The loan program was meant for companies that could no longer finance themselves through traditional means, like raising money in the markets or borrowing from banks under existing credit lines. The law required that the federal money — which comes at a low 1 percent interest rate and in some cases doesn’t need to be paid back — be spent on things like payroll or rent.

But the program has been riddled with problems. Within days of its start, its money ran out, prompting Congress to approve an additional $310 billion in funding that will open for applications on Monday. Countless small businesses were shut out, even as a number of large companies received millions of dollars in aid.

Read full article

Businesses Seek Sweeping Shield From Pandemic Liability Before They Reopen

The U.S. Plans To Lend $500 Billion To Large Companies. It Won’t Require Them To Preserve Jobs Or Limit Executive Pay.

Americans Are In the Dark On One Of the Trump Administration’s Key Coronavirus Response Tools

How Lobbyists Robbed Small Business Relief Loans

Public Companies Received $1 Billion In Stimulus Funds Meant For Small Businesses

Hotelier’s Push for $126 Million in Small-Business Aid Draws Scrutiny

Think Twice, Mnuchin Tells Prep Schools Seeking Virus Loans

Before Pandemic, Trump’s Stockpile Chief Put Focus On Biodefense. An Old Client Benefited.

You may also read!

The Secrets of ‘Cognitive Super-Agers’

One of my greatest pleasures during the Covid-19 shutdowns

Read More...

Is Education No Longer the ‘Great Equalizer’?

There is an ongoing debate over what kind of

Read More...

Even the terrorist threat to the United States is now partisan

Hours after he announced his objection to forming a

Read More...

Mobile Sliding Menu