Politics

Here's what's in the $2 trillion coronavirus stimulus bill

Key Points
  • The $2 trillion economic relief plan approved by the Senate includes direct payments to Americans, strengthened unemployment insurance, loans to businesses and increased health-care resources. 
  • The House now takes up the massive relief package and hopes to pass it Friday morning.
A view of the Capitol's Rotunda is seen reflected in an ambulance as negotiations on a COVID-19 economic bailout continue on Capitol Hill March 24, 2020, in Washington, DC.
Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images

The unprecedented stimulus bill approved unanimously by the Senate has an estimated $2 trillion price tag that backers hope will lessen the coronavirus pandemic's human and economic toll. 

The chamber passed the legislation Wednesday night as workers face widespread layoffs, hospitals and states starve for resources and businesses small and large worry about their survival. The House aims to pass it by Friday.

The bill, designed to offer relief to individuals, the health-care system and even an entire corporate sector ravaged by the outbreak, would: 

  • Give one-time direct payments of up to $1,200 for individuals and $2,400 for couples, with $500 added for every child, based on 2019 tax returns for those who filed them and 2018 information if they have not. The benefit would start to phase out above $75,000 in income for individuals and $150,000 for couples, going away completely at the $99,000 and $198,000 thresholds, respectively.
  • Boost unemployment insurance, adding $600 per week for up to four months on top of what beneficiaries normally receive from states. It expands eligibility to self-employed people and independent contractors.
  • Create a $500 billion pool of taxpayer money to make loans, loan guarantees or investments to or in businesses, states and municipalities damaged by the crisis.
  • Give $25 billion in grants to airlines and $4 billion to cargo carriers to be used exclusively to pay employee wages, salaries and benefits, and set aside another $25 billion and $4 billion, respectively, for loans and loan guarantees. 
  • Provide $17 billion in loans and loan guarantees for unspecified "businesses critical to maintaining national security."
  • Put $117 billion into hospitals and veterans' health care.
  • Provide $16 billion for the strategic national stockpile of pharmaceutical and medical supplies.
  • Give $350 billion in loans for small businesses to cover salary, wages and benefits, worth 250% of an employer's monthly payroll, with a maximum loan of $10 million.
  • Include a tax credit for retaining employees, worth up to 50% of wages paid during the crisis, for businesses forced to suspend operations or that have seen gross receipts fall by 50% from the previous year.
  • Require group health plans and insurance providers to cover preventive services related to coronavirus without cost sharing.
  • Delay payroll tax for employers, requiring half of the deferred tax to be paid by the end of 2021 and the other half by the end of 2022.
  • Ban companies that take government loans from buying back stock until a year after the loan is paid back.
  • Bar employees or executives who made at least $425,000 last year from getting a raise.
  • Stop President Donald Trump and his family members' businesses from receiving emergency taxpayer relief. The provision also applies to Vice President Mike Pence, heads of executive departments, members of Congress and their family members. 
  • Suspend federal student loan payments through Sept. 30 with no accrual of interest on those loans. 

As COVID-19 spreads across the U.S., there are now more than 65,000 cases and at least 900 deaths from it, according to Johns Hopkins University. Patients have flooded hospitals in New York City, the epicenter of the outbreak in the U.S., as states around the country plead for more critical resources such as masks and ventilators. 

As businesses and schools close across the country to slow the outbreak, a wave of layoffs and furloughs has hit Americans. States are expected to report historic unemployment claims as the economy slows and workers struggle to cover bills. 

— CNBC's Kayla Tausche contributed to this report

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