One year after President Biden signed the American Rescue Plan Act into law, our country is in the midst of one of the strongest periods of economic growth in a century. Enacted during a severe public health and economic crisis, the American Rescue Plan has made a difference in the lives of millions of Americans – expanding access to COVID-19 vaccines and testing, providing economic relief that has kept millions of children out of poverty, preventing evictions and foreclosures, and helping small businesses keep their doors open. The Department of the Treasury is proud to administer over $1 trillion in programs and tax credits under the American Rescue Plan, as well as other recovery programs authorized in prior legislation.
While much work remains to make sure this recovery reaches all Americans and rebuilds our economy stronger than before, the first year of the American Rescue Plan has been a remarkable success. The American Rescue Plan accelerated the economic recovery throughout 2021 and made it more resilient to challenges: one analysis found that the law resulted in 4 million more jobs and nearly doubled GDP growth – and that without it, the United States would have come close to a double-digit recession in spring 2021. Its results have also been historically equitable, with major progress against child poverty, food insecurity, and unemployment for low-income communities and communities of color.
One year after the passage of American Rescue Plan (ARP), new data show how ARP gave families, businesses, and governments the resources needed to weather the public health and economic crisis, accelerate the recovery, and build a stronger foundation for the future. Treasury has also released new highlights showing the myriad ways that State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF) are making a difference in communities across the country.
RESPONDING TO THE PUBLIC HEALTH AND ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF COVID-19
The COVID-19 pandemic caused dual crises: a public health emergency and a sudden, severe economic recession. In early 2021, one year into the pandemic, both crises continued to rage, and the Biden-Harris Administration took decisive action to turn the tide through the ARP. The ARP provides historic support for state, local, and Tribal governments to fight the pandemic – and for families and small businesses across the country to help weather its economic disruptions. Looking back one year after the passage of ARP, its programs not only changed the trajectory of the recovery – but also seized this moment to make smart investments that strengthen long-term growth and opportunity as our country rebuilds.
State, local, and Tribal governments have put ARP funds to work to protect public health. In the first nine months alone of SLFRF, reporting from the largest recipients 1 shows that:
The ARP gave families, businesses, and governments the resources needed to weather the economic crisis – and accelerate the recovery. As the recovery strengthened throughout 2021, millions more workers have found jobs and seen their wages rise.
Treasury urges state, local, and Tribal governments to use ARP funds to confront the most pressing challenges that our economy and communities face:
The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the pre-existing housing crisis, putting millions of renters and homeowners at risk of losing their homes. The Biden-Harris Administration approached this crisis with the goal of not only preventing evictions during the public health emergency and through the economic recovery, but also with an eye towards building a nationwide eviction prevention infrastructure. One year after the passage of the ARP and months after the end of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC’s) eviction moratorium, eviction filings remain at roughly 60 percent of pre-pandemic averages, and rental assistance and other eviction prevention measures enabled by the ARP continue to provide a lifeline to renters in need. The Administration has also provided unprecedented support to prevent foreclosures and help homeowners stay in their homes.
The Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) programs have played a key role, as part of broader administration efforts, in preventing what many predicted would be an eviction tsunami after the expiration of the CDC’s eviction moratorium.
Through the Homeowner Assistance Fund, Treasury has disbursed over $9 billion to keep families in their homes. Treasury has worked with states, territories, and Tribal governments to set up comprehensive foreclosure prevention programs using these funds while addressing immediate priorities, including increased utility costs, robust provision of housing counseling resources, and targeting of support to low-income areas and areas that have faced discrimination in housing markets.
Recognizing the scale of these challenges, 351 state, local, and Tribal governments plan to use $11.3 billion in SLFRF funds for emergency and longer-term housing support, addressing the full spectrum of housing security needs. Together, these governments are:
HELPING SMALL BUSINESSES WEATHER THE PANDEMIC AND EMERGE STRONGER
While many businesses have faced strain throughout the pandemic, small businesses and minority-owned businesses have been hit especially hard. Since the beginning of the pandemic, 400,000 small businesses have closed, and the number of self-employed business owners has fallen more sharply among minority groups. The ARP and other recovery programs took decisive action to stabilize small businesses, helping them keep their doors open and staff on payroll. But beyond the immediate crisis, these programs are making transformational investments in expanding access to credit and entrepreneurship support in underserved communities. These programs will expand opportunity, strengthen the economy in places underserved for far too long, and increase our resilience to the next crisis.
Over 270 state, local, and Tribal governments are using SLFRF to help small businesses in their communities weather the pandemic. For example:
Recovery programs for the hardest hit sectors have also helped keep hundreds of thousands of workers on the job. For example, Coronavirus Emergency Relief for Transportation Services (CERTS), authorized in December 2020, helped 1,462 transportation businesses, which faced devastating revenue losses during the pandemic, keep their doors open, their staff employed, and continue to meet the costs of running their business. In total, the program dispersed roughly $2 billion in grants, with 80 percent of funds expended in 2021 going to employee payroll. Together, the businesses employed over 200,000 workers when the pandemic struck, and 93 percent were small businesses.
The ARP also supported hundreds of thousands of jobs in hard hit sectors, specifically the airline industry. The Payroll Support Program, which was extended as part of the ARP, provided funds to support employee payrolls for certain air carriers and aviation contractors. The program has helped businesses retain hundreds of thousands of employees across the industry.
Treasury has announced more than $8.7 billion in investments to dramatically scale up the work of 186 community financial institutions through the Emergency Capital Investment Program. Increasing lending to small businesses, minority-owned businesses, and low- and moderate-income consumers in underserved communities will help create a virtuous cycle of growth and make a lasting change in local economies.
The State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) will complement these investments by helping states, the District of Columbia, territories, and Tribal governments develop sustainable, lasting programs that expand capital access in underserved communities.
[1] Statistics drawn from quarterly Project and Expenditure Reports covering program implementation through December 31, 2021. Quarterly reporting is required from states, territories, cities and counties with either a population over 250,000 or an award over $10 million, and Tribal governments with an award over $30 million.