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Dec 15 2022 11:27am
https://taxfoundation.org/us-covid19-fiscal-response/

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Compared to Europe, the U.S. was more likely to offer direct cash assistance to households, whereas European governments were more likely to rely on loan guarantees and support to businesses. Germany, for example, relied heavily on subsidies to businesses to maintain their payrolls and not lay off workers. While the U.S. experimented with a similar scheme through the Paycheck Protection Program, it also substantially expanded unemployment benefits to individuals, which continued until September 2021.

Additionally, the payments to U.S. households targeted much broader populations than the stimulus in Europe. European economies mainly administered targeted relief through existing welfare programs, while the U.S. sent payments to the vast majority of households. In total, 163 million payments were sent to U.S. individuals, about 85 percent of which went to households earning under $100,000 per year. Japan similarly sent checks of around $950 to households in 2020, but the U.S. stood alone in 2021 when it issued a third round of cash payments of up to $1,400 for individuals under the American Rescue Plan...

At a budgetary cost of $1.9 trillion, the American Rescue Plan passed in March of last year despite many economists, most notably Larry Summers, warning that the legislation could contribute to higher inflation. Furthermore, the stimulus came at a time when the U.S. national debt was already higher (as a share of GDP) than at any time since World War II, and projected to increase dramatically over the next 30 years.

As the U.S. grapples with rising price inflation, a large and growing national debt, as well as a possible economic slowdown due to Omicron, the decision to provide additional fiscal support will prove to be a difficult one. Policymakers can debate how much stimulus is appropriate, but what is clear is that the U.S. fiscal support so far during the pandemic outranks nearly every industrialized country.
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Dec 15 2022 11:32am
Quote (bogie160 @ Dec 15 2022 11:27am)


Europe has safety nets we don't. we still overspent a bit i'd say but it's not a perfectly congruent application to compare 1:1.

as i'm not european i'd be curious if areas had a pending eviction crisis during covid that required stays on evictions, like we did in the US.
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