President Donald Trump supported and signed into law legislation providing direct COVID-19 relief payments to Americans, and he later advocated for increasing the amount of those payments.
CARES Act (March 2020): President Trump signed the $2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act into law on March 27, 2020, which authorized direct payments of up to $1,200 per adult for individuals with an adjusted gross income (AGI) up to $75,000, and $500 per child.
Stimulus Check Branding: In an unprecedented move, Trump's name was printed on the memo line of the stimulus checks sent to millions of Americans.
$2,000 Payment Support (December 2020): After initially delaying the signing of a second relief package in December 2020, Trump criticized the $600 checks included in the bill as too low and publicly pushed for Congress to increase them to $2,000.
Second Relief Bill Signing: Despite calling the $900 billion package a "disgrace" for its smaller, $600 amount, Trump signed it on December 27, 2020, to avoid a government shutdown and to ensure that, as he stated, "unemployment benefits [would be] restored" and "money [would be put] in the pockets of the American people".
While Trump urged for $2,000 checks, the final legislation signed in December 2020 contained $600 payments. The subsequent third round of payments ($1,400) was part of the American Rescue Plan Act, signed by President Biden in 2021.
U.S. Department of the Treasury (.gov)
Direct payments to Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic significantly boosted consumer demand, contributing to a measurable rise in inflation, with estimates suggesting they added approximately 2.5 to 3 percentage points to the U.S. inflation rate. While they supported household income, they were a major driver of the inflation surge in 2021 and early 2022 by providing excess liquidity when supply chains were constrained.
Federal Reserve Board (.gov)
Impact During COVID-19 (20202022)
Initial Stimulus (2020-2021): The pandemic relief, including the CARES Act and the 2021 American Rescue Plan, fueled a surge in consumer demand for goods while supply chain bottlenecks persisted.
Inflation Contribution: A Federal Reserve study found that 2.6 percentage points of the 7.9% 12-month inflation rate in February 2022 was directly due to stimulus.
Excess Demand: The payments increased demand for goods rather than services, contributing to "excess inflation" as industrial production could not keep up with demand.
Direct vs. Indirect Stimulus: Research indicated that cash payments directly to consumers were more inflationary than indirect stimulus, such as business loans.
Fortune
Impact After COVID-19 (Post-2022)
Sustained Pressure: The effects of the stimulus lasted, with studies showing that the large, rapid transfers in early 2021 contributed to the persistence of core services inflation.
Reduced Impact: As direct stimulus payments stopped, the inflationary pressure from this source began to wane, and inflation began to cool at the end of 2022.
Long-Term View: While some researchers, such as those at the St. Louis Fed and MIT, attribute a large share (roughly 42% of post-pandemic inflation) to government spending, others, such as the Brookings Institution, argue that the vast majority of the inflation spike was driven by supply-linked factors like shipping, energy, and labor shortages, rather than just the demand from, stimulants.
Key Takeaways
Positive and Negative Impact: The payments were successful in reducing "material hardship" in U.S. households, significantly decreasing malnutrition and poverty.
Supply-Demand Mismatch: The core inflationary issue was not just the money itself, but the speed at which it entered an economy with limited capacity (strained supply chains), leading to higher prices.
Long-Lasting Effects: While direct payments were temporary, the inflationary, long-term impact of the accumulated excess savings and the shift in consumer demand continued into 2023.