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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
READOUT: Deputy Secretary Adeyemo Meets with Private Sector
and Philanthropic Leaders to Discuss Economic Opportunity and
Access to Capital
January 25, 2023

WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo participated in a
roundtable discussion on opportunities to advance economic and racial equity and expand
access to capital for underserved Americans alongside senior representatives from the White
House, six federal agencies, and over 20 organizations from the private and social sectors. The
roundtable focused on federal community investment priorities and opportunities for the
private and social sector to align their efforts to amplify the impact of these investments.
The roundtable participants highlighted how legislation like the American Rescue Plan Act,
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, CHIPS Act, and Inflation Reduction Act provide the federal
government the opportunity to drive capital into communities that have long lacked the
resources necessary to create sustainable local economic engines, particularly for underserved
and marginalized communities, including communities of color and low-income, rural, and
Tribal communities. This includes programs like the Biden-Harris Administration’s historic
investments of over $8 billion in CDFIs and MDIs under the Emergency Capital Investment
Program, the nearly $10 billion provided to support small businesses under the Small Business
Credit Initiative, and many others.
The private and philanthropic sectors were represented at the roundtable by members of the
Economic Opportunity Coalition (EOC), a coalition of private sector companies and foundations
working to make historic investments in underserved communities that was announced by Vice
President Harris in the summer of 2022. The Deputy Secretary was joined by representatives
from each of the six Interagency Community Investment Committee (ICIC) agencies, including
USDA Deputy Secretary Jewel Bronaugh, Department of Commerce Under Secretary Don
Cravins, Department of Transportation Assistant Secretary Christopher Coes, and Department of
Housing and Urban Development Assistant Secretary Julia Gordon, among other federal
officials from the Small Business Administration and the White House. Treasury’s Counselor for

Racial Equity Janis Bowdler facilitated the discussion. The ICIC is an interagency coordinating
body that facilitates collaboration between its member agencies in the administration of federal
community investment programs and was announced alongside the EOC by the Vice President
last summer.
During the conversation, Deputy Secretary Adeyemo highlighted the importance of a
coordinated partnership between the public and private sectors to address economic inequality
across the nation and maximize the impact of the Biden-Harris Administration’s unprecedented
investments. In addition representatives from the ICIC agencies discussed their community
investment and economic development priorities, and representatives from EOC members
discussed their organizations’ efforts to advance economic and racial equity and ways they are
considering supporting these federal investments, with a particular emphasis on supporting
mission lenders, small businesses and entrepreneurs, affordable housing and community
infrastructure, and financial inclusion.

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