The Paycheck Protection Program: Did it Pay Off for Small Businesses?
June 24, 2021 | Last Updated on: August 3, 2023
June 24, 2021 | Last Updated on: August 3, 2023
The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) was a small business loan initiative that was part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. The CARES Act was passed into law in 2020, during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. The PPP was originally supposed to be a $350 billion economic stimulus program that would provide eight weeks of cash assistance to small businesses across the United States. The money was distributed through 100 percent federally guaranteed loans that would be forgiven if the money was spent on approved things like rent, employee compensation, and utilities. The loans were backed and administered by the Small Business Administration (SBA). The purpose of the PPP loan program was to prevent small businesses from closing down and to keep the people who work for them employed. The original price tag for the PPP was $350 billion, and additional funding for this initial phase of it was approved at a later date.
In late 2020, a new bill was passed and signed into law that extended the PPP to help small businesses make it through the darkest days of the coronavirus pandemic during the winter of 2021. The second round of funding ended in May 2021, except for some microloan programs targeted to select minority groups. Funding for the second round was $285 billion.
In total, almost $800 billion, representing 12 million loans, has been distributed to small businesses across the United States through the PPP.
Some of the things that made the Paycheck Protection Program appealing to small business owners are:
In the end, a forgiven loan was a non-taxable grant to the small business.
Biz2Credit and its partners recently hosted a webinar with Jeanne Shaheen, the senior United States Senator from New Hampshire. She is a member of the Democratic party and has been a senator since 2009. Prior to that, she was the governor of New Hampshire and an educator and held other influential positions in politics and government. She is a member of the Senate appropriations committee and was a co-author of the Paycheck Protection Program. Senator Shaheen was influential in its shaping and development.
The topics covered during the online event included:
Senator Shaheen provided honest and candid responses to questions from business owners about the Paycheck Protection Program and the support they could expect in the years ahead.
In addition to all this, the discussion included representatives from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), who explained how accountants and the firms they work for played a critical role in the rollout of the PPP and in making it successful. Information was also shared from the Paychex IHS Markit Small Business Employment Watch about how small businesses made it through the COVID-19 pandemic. Biz2Credit’s CEO Rohit Arora also provided an informed perspective about what’s coming next for business owners.
During the webinar, the senator offered her perspective on the PPP now that it’s over and answered questions from business owners. Some of the highlights include:
After Senator Shaheen left the webinar, representatives from the AICPA told personal stories about their clients who were helped by loans from the Paycheck Protection Program. Finally, the employment and economic information shared by Paychex and Biz2Credit painted a somewhat more optimistic picture of the future than small business owners have become used to in 2020 and most of 2021.
If you didn’t participate in this informative webinar, a recording of it is available. You owe it to yourself to check it out so you can better position your small business for everything it could be facing in the months and years ahead.