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The Fintech sector set to benefit from the economic stimulus package

To send money and help American households during the health crisis, the Fintech sector wants to offer its digital payment services. On Friday, April 3rd, a note stated that more than 60 million cheques should be sent out from mid-April. In the United States, the new payment solutions services have a card to play in helping the government, considering the speed of sending the money.

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This picture show a person using fintech.

The companies in the Fintech sector want to take advantage of the current situation and place themselves at the core of financial transactions. In the United States, in these times of health crisis, several departments of the new financial industry have contacted the American government to lend a hand.

Starting this April, financial aid will be distributed to millions of people across the country. However, the colossal processing of data and the risk that some households will not be helped for several months has led the fintech sector to prove indispensable. This is a crucial period and one that is full of interest for mobile payment services.

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A “helicopter money” recovery plan

In just two weeks, the health crisis related to the coronavirus outbreak has put more than 10 million Americans out of work. For the first time, the concept of economic recovery called “monetary helicopter” – which appeared in 1969 by a theory of Milton Friedman – seems to be the solution taken into account by Donald Trump.

The president of the U.S confirmed at the end of March that he intends to help households and businesses by offering $1,200 for singles, $2,400 for married couples, and an additional $500 for each dependent child under age 17.

The plan is simple: to restore purchasing power in these times of crisis, so as not to sink businesses. This is an unprecedented recovery plan that bypasses all monetary and fiscal policy intermediaries, but that risks putting the government in the face of numerous constraints.

On Friday, April 3rd, a note stated that more than 60 million cheques should be sent out from mid-April. However, millions of them would not have arrived at their destination before the week of August 17th, five months from now. A catastrophic schedule, but an opportunity for fintech companies to take advantage of it and to propose its alternatives.

“Let Fintech help you”

Never before has the fintech sector experienced such an interesting period as this coronavirus crisis. If in Africa the dematerialization of payments has become part of monetary policy plans, in the United States the new payment solutions services also have a card to play in helping the government. “Let fintech help,” Plaid CEO Zach Perret said on Twitter. The man behind the startup (recently bought by Visa for $5.3 billion), wants the government to work with them so that these payments to households can be dematerialized, and therefore sent faster.

The idea is shared by a significant number of other startups. The speed of sending is a strong argument that the fintech sector wants to take advantage of promoting today, but it is not the only argument put forward. The government will be able to make direct transfers without using cheques, but the reality is not so simple: more than 14 million Americans do not have a bank account, and more than 28 million will have to wait months for their paper cheque because their bank account is not linked to the tax authorities. A window opens to the various players in mobile payment services.

“We have the technology to transmit money to everyone (including those without a bank account). Square and many of our fintech partners can help the US government,” said Jack Dorsey on Twitter. On the social network he co-founded, the CEO of the electronic payment company Square is calling on legislators to work with his service, which will respond to various issues that the government is going to have to deal with, and fall behind.

The Cash App solution

In this case, the big favorites are PayPal and Square. In his various tweets last week, Jack Dorsey mentioned that the two online payment giants could cross their technologies so that the government could use their platforms to make direct payments to Americans. In a report by CNN Business, it is noted that the two companies have already had discussions with the Treasury to promote Cash App and Venmo, the two platforms developed respectively by Square and PayPal.

“Consumers who don’t have a bank account with the IRS – about 28 million Americans – would be forced to receive a paper check in the mail and have to wait several months, whereas if they open a Cash App account, they could receive their money faster,” explained Jason Gardner, CEO of the payment card company Marqeta. A help for the United States, and above all an opportunity for Cash App.

The app has 24 million U.S. customers, and in 2019 it will have an operating profit of $458 million, an increase of 135%. Helping the IRS and the Treasury would mean transactions of more than $250 billion of the $2 trillion U.S. global aid package. A treasury.

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(Featured image by Patrick Tomasso via Unsplash)

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First published in PRESSECITRON, a third-party contributor translated and adapted the article from the original. In case of discrepancy, the original will prevail.

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Arturo Garcia started out as a political writer for a local newspaper in Peru, before covering big-league sports for national broadsheets. Eventually he began writing about innovative tech and business trends, which let him travel all over North and South America. Currently he is exploring the world of Bitcoin and cannabis, two hot commodities which he believes are poised to change history.