Because the PPP loans were backed by the Small Business Administration, upon seeing the wide-spread confusion, they put together a page of FAQs in order to provide some clarity to business owners and their accountants. In theory, a concise explanation of the exact operation of the loans should have served to put to rest the minds of those concerned. Equally, it should have provided a clear roadmap for business owners to follow, ensuring that they did not mistakenly receive these loans. However, this was not how things played out in actuality. All of the FAQs would actually raise more questions than they answered. Of particular concern was Question 31:
“Do businesses owned by large companies with adequate sources of liquidity to support the business’s operations qualify for a PPP loan?”
With the answer provided being:
“Any borrower that applied for a PPP loan prior to the issuance of this guidance and repays the loan in full by May 7, 2020, will be deemed by SBA to have made the required certification in good faith.”
This left us with the answer that if you had enough liquid capital that you did not really need the loan, you could repay it by May 7 with no questions asked. May 7 … ten days after this information was released! US-wide, accountants went into uproar as we were given the impossible task of contacting every last one of our business clients to determine if they were in real need of the loan and if it needed to be repaid. In response to the uproar, the SBA pushed the deadline until May 14. This was only met with more unrest and outrage as this still was an unmanageable task. Congress, at this point, came forward with the vital clarification that if you needed help or were uncertain if you needed help that this loan was for you. In the end, the backlash from this miscommunication was not the worst. Congress's clarification greatly broadened the understood scope of those eligible for the loan and put many minds at rest. Nonetheless, it did make for an exceptionally stressful week at the office to the backdrop of an already exceptionally stressful time.
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