The US Senate agreed to a bipartisan $2 trillion stimulus deal. It’s expected to eventually get through the House and be enacted in coming days.
$1,200 Checks
The part that people are most interested in that the government will mailing out checks of $1,200 to most Americans.
- Each individual (non-dependent) gets $1,200; couples get $2,400 (total); plus $500 per child. For example, a couple with two children will get a $3,400 check in the mail.
- Even those who don’t make money and those on Social Security will get these checks.
- The only exception is those who earn more than $99,000 per year ($198,000 for a couple) who will not get anything.
- There’s a phase-out from $75,000 – $99,999 ($150,000 – $198,000 for couples) where you’ll get a smaller check.
- Payment is based on your prior tax return (2018 or 2019), but if you make too much in 2020 they money will be clawed back, I believe.
Unemployment Benefits
Another big component is the expansion of unemployment benefits. The increased benefits include:
- Provides enhanced unemployment benefits for 4 months. This increases your unemployment check by $600/week, on top of what the state regularly gives, for 4 months.
- Extends unemployment 13 weeks longer than usual rules. Regular is 26 weeks, I think, so now it would be 39 weeks. (This kicks in back from January 27.)
- Extends unemployment to self-employed workers as well. That would include gig workers like Uber drivers.
- Extends unemployment to furloughed employees as well. The added goal here is that businesses should not fire employees, instead leave them on as furloughed.
Small Business Loans
This fund is for loans of up to $10M to companies of 500 employees or fewer. Businesses who pledge to keep their workers can take a loan from the government, with the eventual forgiveness of the loan if they continue to pay their employees. I’m sketchy on the details here, but it sounds like you can get forgiveness on the loan for 8 weeks worth of payroll, mortgage interest, and rent costs.
$2T List
Here’s a partial break-down of the $2 trillion, as best as I could find:
- $250B for direct payments/checks to individuals and families. (see above)
- $367B for small business loans. (see above)
- $250B to boost unemployment insurance benefits. (see above)
- $500B in loans for distressed companies. $75B of this is earmarked for airlines and travel.
- $130B in funding for hospitals and medical equipment.
- $150B in funding for state and local governments.
Taxes
- Payroll taxes for 2020 can be deferred.
- When are taxes due in 2020? IRS tax–filing extension explained. The IRS says individuals and businesses can delay filing and paying federal tax bills for 90 days, to July 15 from April 15, as part of an emergency relief plan amid the coronavirus pandemic.