Americans could receive more than $1,000 from the government depending on how long the crisis lasts.
The coronavirus has upended modern American life, forcing restaurants, bars, movie theaters, and other businesses to shutter in a bid to curb its spread. That has triggered an initial wave of layoffs, and both companies and consumers are abruptly cutting their spending.
A survey released Tuesday from NPR, PBS, and Maris found that 18% of American workers either lost their jobs or had hours cut from work schedules, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Its fueled calls for the government to step in with direct emergency aid. Economists such as Jason Furman, the former head of the Obama administration's Council of Economic Advisors, backed the idea of sending checks to people earlier this month.
The proposal gained further steam when Sen. Mitt Romney rolled out his plan to send people checks
To staunch the fallout, the Trump administration is weighing even larger checks to encourage spending and helping people make ends meet.
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People would likely not have to fill out anything for the payments — and they could be delivered by April.
Rich people are probably not going to get a check.
Millionaires and other wealthy Americans didn't get government money in the last recession.
And it's likely they wouldn't this time either, though the income cutoff is not immediately clear. It depends on the legislative language of the final $1 trillion stimulus bill.