'Companies didn’t create this, they weren’t mismanaged... This was created by a virus:' Rep. Kevin McCarthy

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Stocks drop drastically after unemployment hits 4.4%. House Minority Leader (R) California Rep. Kevin McCarthy addresses the latest job cuts numbers during the COVID-19 outbreak.

Video Transcript

- Starting today is the government's paycheck protection program. This will allow businesses with fewer than 500 employees to get 100% federally guaranteed loans for eight weeks. If they're used to then pay employees, or rent or utilities, for that matter, that debt will be forgiven. To join us now to talk about this, as well as the other measures that Congress is taking and may yet take to help people during this pandemic, we're joined by representative Kevin McCarthy, Republican of California, and House Minority Leader. Congressman, thank you so much for joining us.

This is obviously a huge effort on the part of the government. It is up to banks, in many cases, to administer this. And we've been hearing sort of uneven reports about banks that are ready and banks that are not. And I just wonder, from your perspective, what can Congress do to sort of help with the bureaucracy of this, if anything? Because it seems as though, you know, anything this large, it's perhaps inevitable that it's going to be tricky to pull off.

KEVIN MCCARTHY: Well, thank you for having me, for one, and let's get to your question. The first thing you want to look at, it is better that government goes through banks, because most small businesses have a relationship with their banks. So it'll be faster. Think for one moment, we're less than a week away from passing and signing this bill, and already today more than $800 million have gone out to small businesses. Let's walk through what it is, and let's get to the answering of your question.

What the part of the CARES Act that this does $350 billion goes to small businesses, which is defined by 500 employees or fewer. And what it will do is a number of these businesses have been shut down because government has asked us to close in to protect ourselves from this virus. So we provide you a guaranteed loan, meaning the SBA backs it up, you go to your bank. It's a two-page form you fill out. We take an average from your last year or 2 and 1/2 times your expenses for two months.

In this, if you take this money in this loan and you pay your rent, you pay your utilities, and your play-- pay your employees, that portion of it is forgiven. It's no longer a loan. That part is a grant. So if you have laid somebody off, you can bring them back on. The idea here is to keep people employed, to keep small businesses up and running, get through the next two months, get past this virus, and our economy comes back strong. That's the idea. And this'll probably be very, very popular, as we're finding out right now.