Kevin O'Leary Criticizes Stimulus: Unemployed Americans Should Get ‘$2,000 Per Month' for 12 Months

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After months of uncertainty, the $900 billion coronavirus relief package will provide a much-needed lifeline for jobless Americans – it includes a $300 boost to weekly unemployment benefits for 11 weeks, and for those with both wage and self-employment income, an additional $100 boost. It also extends unemployment benefits for gig workers through mid-March.

Without the package, many important provisions from the CARES Act would've expired in December and left millions of people without unemployment benefits, as they would not normally be eligible.

However, according to entrepreneur Kevin O'Leary, more assistance should have been provided for unemployed Americans, rather than funding package provisions like the $600 stimulus checks and the $284 billion Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), he tells CNBC Make It.

"I would have preferred that Congress took the money and gave it all directly to individuals that are in dire straits due to extended unemployment as a result of the pandemic," says O'Leary, an investor on ABC's "Shark Tank" and chairman of O'Shares ETFs.

He would recommend Congress use the funds to extend unemployment benefits. For example, he said, "If you became unemployed after March and are still unemployed, you get $2,000 per month for the next 12 months or until you find work."

Michele Evermore, senior researcher and policy analyst for social insurance at the National Employment Law Project, agrees that "the relief passed was far too little."

"Frankly – and not just because I am a UI expert – I think if something should be increased, it should be the weeks and amount of UI," Evermore says. "Money going to people who otherwise would have no income isn't just addressing the most urgent need, it goes to the people with the highest propensity to spend it."

What O'Leary proposes isn't so far-fetched. As Evermore points out, "$2,000 a month is basically what the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation was," referring to the initial $600 weekly boost to state-provided unemployment aid enacted in March due to the CARES Act, which expired in July. "I of course am all for that," she says.

However, Evermore notes that taking away other stimulus package provisions, like the stimulus checks or the forgivable PPP loans, creates a "false dilemma."

"There are a lot of people who aren't technically unemployed who don't have work and who are pretty desperate," Evermore says, "so we need options to make sure that everybody who is out of work or unable to work, through no fault of their own, can keep themselves afloat. We need a wide array of options here."

O'Leary previously expressed his stance in October, before the $900 billion package passed in December.

"I don't want [those unemployed] to be in a great, painful space," he said in October.

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Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to "Shark Tank."

absotivelynotme on January 5th, 2021 at 21:23 UTC »

My wife and I got our stimulus checks yesterday. Paid our bills. It’s basically gone.

Edit: This is with the best of intentions. And I understand it’s almost certainly meaningless, I’m just saying it in any potential future where we wind up getting paid by the government again. The only reason I’m aware of that my wife and I got our payment as early as we did is that she signed us up for direct deposit through the IRS years ago. But again, to everyone wishing they had their check already, I’m so sorry. And I hope you all get it tomorrow.

elshizzo on January 5th, 2021 at 21:20 UTC »

Imagine how heartless you have to be to make Kevin O'Leary seem sympathetic. The Republican party is a cancer on the country

EckimusPrime on January 5th, 2021 at 20:51 UTC »

We’re too rich. We can’t afford it.