WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin denied on Friday that he is attempting to limit President-elect Joe Biden's options for reviving the pandemic-damaged economy by ending several emergency loan programs being run by the Federal Reserve.
Mnuchin said the programs were not being heavily utilized and Congress can make better use of the money by re-allocating it toward small-business grants and extended unemployment assistance.
"We're not trying to hinder anything," Mnuchin said in a CNBC interview. "We don't need this money to buy corporate bonds. We need this money to go help small businesses that are still closed."
Mnuchin has argued that the decision will allow Congress to re-appropriate $455 billion to other coronavirus programs.
After initially objecting to the move, which will end the Fed's corporate credit, municipal lending and Main Street Lending programs as of Dec. 31, the Fed softened its stance.
The Fed released a letter Friday from Chairman Jerome Powell in which he said the central bank would comply with Mnuchin's request to close out the emergency loan programs and return the unused money appropriated by Congress to Treasury.
Powell said in his letter to Mnuchin that he is "pleased with all that we have accomplished together this year."
Powell's letter struck a more collegial tone than a one sentence statement the Fed issued Thursday. The central bank had said it would have preferred all the emergency facilities set up during the pandemic be maintained "to serve their import role as a backstop for our still-strained and vulnerable economy."