Was the Paycheck Protection Program Effective?

July 06, 2022

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which provided relief to small businesses during the COVID-19 crisis, was implemented quickly and wound up most of its operations within two years.
  • But, as a new study by economist David Autor and others showed, the PPP was not well targeted. Only about one-quarter of PPP funds supported jobs that otherwise would have disappeared.
  • In addition, the study found that the PPP’s benefits flowed disproportionately to wealthier households rather than to the rank-and-file workers that its funds were intended to reach.

The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) directed hundreds of billions of dollars to small businesses and other organizations adversely affected by the COVID-19 crisis, providing resources to maintain payrolls, to hire back employees who may have been laid off and to cover important overhead.

But was this money well spent? A recent study offers evidence that the cost of each job saved was very high and that most of the program’s benefits flowed to small-business owners, their creditors and their suppliers rather than to workers. Other crisis programs, including unemployment insurance and economic impact payments, were targeted much more successfully to wage earners.

Background and Key PPP Loan Specifications

Established as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act—which was signed by President Donald Trump on March 27, 2020—the PPP began to distribute forgivable loans to small businesses on April 3, just three weeks after a national emergency was declared in the United States. This was a remarkably timely response to the crisis. More than 90% of the nearly $800 billion of PPP loans were forgiven by June 20, 2022, making the program largely temporary as well.See U.S. Small Business Administration, “Forgiveness Platform Lender Submission Metrics (PDF),” with data as of June 20, 2022.

The CARES Act included the following key specifications regarding the program, as summarized by the Congressional Research Service:Appendix of Congressional Research Service, “COVID-19 Relief Assistance to Small Businesses: Issues and Policy Options,” Oct. 1, 2021.

  • Loans were uncollateralized, were nonrecourse (i.e., no other assets of the borrower were at risk), did not require a personal guarantee by the borrower and came with a 100% U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) guarantee. Loans were forgiven if borrowers certified that the funds were used within a specified period for payroll, utilities, rent or mortgage payments and that certain employment targets were maintained.
  • The maximum term was initially 10 years (later reduced to two years), and the maximum interest rate was initially 4% (later reduced to 1%).
  • The SBA waived its typical upfront loan guarantee fee, annual servicing fee and the no-credit-available-elsewhere requirement.
  • Recipients included any business, nonprofit, veterans’ organization or tribal business with fewer than 500 employees (or, alternatively, the SBA’s size standard for number of employees for the industry in which they operated). Sole proprietors, independent contractors and self-employed individuals also were covered.
  • PPP loans could be used for payroll costs, costs related to the continuation of group health care benefits (sick, medical or family leave), insurance premiums, employee salaries, commissions or similar compensation, mortgage payments, rent, utilities and interest on any debt obligations.
  • Borrowers were required to certify that the loan was necessary because of uncertain economic conditions and to support ongoing operations. They had to acknowledge that the funds would be used to retain workers, maintain payroll, or make mortgage, lease and utility payments.

Evaluating the PPP’s Effectiveness

The effectiveness of the PPP, which was designed as a temporary government program, can be judged by whether it was timely and targeted.See Douglas W. Elmendorf and Jason Furman, “If, When, How: A Primer on Fiscal Stimulus,” Strategy Paper of the Hamilton Project, Brookings Institution, January 2008. As noted earlier, the PPP was timely. It began distributing funds within three weeks of the declaration of a national emergency; by comparison, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act did not become law until more than a year following the onset of the Great Recession in December 2007.

But was the PPP well targeted? In particular, how much employment did it support at small firms? Over what time frame? At what cost? And was its distribution of benefits fair in the sense that greater benefits accrued to lower-income households?

In their 2022 study “The $800 Billion Paycheck Protection Program: Where Did the Money Go and Why Did It Go There?,” David Autor and others investigated the targeting of the PPP’s benefits.See David Autor, David Cho, Leland D. Crane, Mita Goldar, Byron Lutz, Joshua Montes, William B. Peterman, David Ratner, Daniel Villar and Ahu Yildirmaz, “The $800 Billion Paycheck Protection Program: Where Did the Money Go and Why Did It Go There?” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2022, Vol. 36, No. 2, pp. 55-80. By comparing employment trends at two groups of very similar small businesses—one group that was just under the PPP’s size threshold and another that was slightly too large to qualify—the researchers found that the program supported employment, as intended. They wrote:

“[W]e estimate that taking out a PPP loan boosted firm employment by between 4 and 10 percent in mid-May [2020] and by 0 to 6 percent by the end of the year. Our best evidence is that about 2.97 million jobs per week were preserved by the Paycheck Protection Program in the second quarter of 2020, and 1.75 million jobs per week were preserved in the fourth quarter.”See Autor et al., 2022, pp. 63-64.

But preserving jobs was expensive. The study found that, depending on the assumptions, the cost per job saved for one year was $169,000 to $258,000, which was much higher than the average amount—$58,200—paid in wages and benefits to small-business employees in 2020. The authors concluded that the PPP cost taxpayers roughly $4 for every $1 of wages and benefits received by workers in “saved” jobs. The “leakage”—$3 out of every $4 distributed through the program—went to small-business owners. According to the study, small-business owners shared these dollars with suppliers, whose sales to loan recipients were greater than they would have been without the PPP, and with banks and other lenders in the form of greater loan volumes and fees for PPP loan administration.

Another aspect of targeting concerns the PPP’s progressivity (that is, when greater benefits flow to lower-income households) or regressivity (when greater benefits flow to higher-income households). This is a relevant metric because rank-and-file workers employed by small businesses were the intended beneficiaries of the PPP. In the words of U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, one of the PPP’s sponsors, “[T]he PPP helped support up to 55 million jobs, including up to 4.5 million in manufacturing, with an average firm size of just 20 employees.”See “Rubio Details Historic Success of the Paycheck Protection Program,” a Dec. 10, 2020, press release from the senator’s office.

The Autor study estimated that only about one-quarter of the PPP’s $800 billion outlay ultimately accrued to workers whose jobs were saved. Based on the known distributions of incomes among workers in small businesses, as well as on the incomes of bank and small-business owners (both PPP loan recipients and their suppliers), the authors estimated that 72% of PPP funds were captured by households with incomes in the top 20% of the national distribution.

In terms of progressivity, the distribution of PPP benefits compares unfavorably with the other two major fiscal-policy programs during COVID-19, which issued $680 billion in unemployment insurance payments and $800 billion in economic impact payments, according to the study. About 20% to 25% of unemployment insurance payments went to households with incomes in the top 20% of the national distribution, while just 10% to 15% of stimulus checks—up to $1,200 per adult and $500 per qualifying child—went to households with that level of income. The greater progressivity of the latter was due primarily to income caps limiting eligibility, the authors noted.

Conclusions: A Critical but Imperfect Policy

The PPP was a very large and very timely fiscal-policy intervention, saving about 3 million jobs at its peak in the second quarter of 2020 and distributing $800 billion well within two years of the onset of the COVID-19 crisis. But it was poorly targeted, as almost three-quarters of its benefits went to unintended recipients, including business owners, creditors and suppliers, rather than to workers. Due to differences in the typical incomes of those varied constituencies, it also ended up being quite regressive compared with other major COVID-19 relief programs, as it benefited high-income households much more.

Notes

  1. See U.S. Small Business Administration, “Forgiveness Platform Lender Submission Metrics (PDF),” with data as of June 20, 2022.
  2. Appendix of Congressional Research Service, “COVID-19 Relief Assistance to Small Businesses: Issues and Policy Options,” Oct. 1, 2021.
  3. See Douglas W. Elmendorf and Jason Furman, “If, When, How: A Primer on Fiscal Stimulus,” Strategy Paper of the Hamilton Project, Brookings Institution, January 2008.
  4. See David Autor, David Cho, Leland D. Crane, Mita Goldar, Byron Lutz, Joshua Montes, William B. Peterman, David Ratner, Daniel Villar and Ahu Yildirmaz, “The $800 Billion Paycheck Protection Program: Where Did the Money Go and Why Did It Go There?” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2022, Vol. 36, No. 2, pp. 55-80.
  5. See Autor et al., 2022, pp. 63-64.
  6. See “Rubio Details Historic Success of the Paycheck Protection Program,” a Dec. 10, 2020, press release from the senator’s office.
About the Authors
William Emmons
William R. Emmons

Bill Emmons is a former assistant vice president and lead economist in the Supervision Division at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

William Emmons
William R. Emmons

Bill Emmons is a former assistant vice president and lead economist in the Supervision Division at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Drew Dahl
Drew Dahl

Drew Dahl was an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Drew Dahl
Drew Dahl

Drew Dahl was an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Views expressed in Regional Economist are not necessarily those of the St. Louis Fed or Federal Reserve System.


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