OPEC struggles to win Russian backing for big oil cut amid coronavirus
Anonymousrhondamuse.com
NEW YORK, May 4 (Reuters) - New Yorks Attorney General said on Monday she has asked 11 major U.S. banks to clarify how they had issued loans tied to the U.S governments $660 billion program to rescue small businesses from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. Known as the Paycheck Protection Program, the plan was intended to help small firms weather the worst global economic crisis in decades but has been hobbled by missing paperwork, technology failure and a misdirection of funds to big corporations. Attorney General Letitia James said she is seeking information on the practices, marketing and procedures that banks undertook when they issued those loans. Also of interest is whether some companies had used their lobbying power to influence the way banks had dispensed the loans, she said. We are concerned that women and minority groups did not have equal access to loans, James said in an interview, adding that she worried a disproportionate amount of money had flowed to big companies. A spokesman for James declined to name the 11 banks that had received a letter from the office, sent on April 29, but said they are large U.S. banks. The United States has been hardest hit by the coronavirus, which causes a respiratory disease, having seen 67,821 deaths in the country, higher than any other nation in the world. (Reporting by Koh Gui Qing; Editing by Cynthia Osterman) View comments
Navigating the Challenges of Military Spouse Life
Insights into the unique challenges and opportunities faced by military spouses, emphasizing self-care, resilience, and personal growth.