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9/26/2023

Remarks by Treasury Department’s Counselor for Racial Equity Janis Bowdler at the 2023 U.S. Hispanic Chamber of C…

Remarks by Treasury Department’s Counselor for Racial Equity
Janis Bowdler at the 2023 U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
National Conference
September 26, 2023

As Prepared for Delivery
Thank you Monika for that kind introduction. And a special thank you to Ramiro Cavazos,
Nelson Reyneri, and the entire US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce for having me today. Itʼs an
honor to represent the Treasury Department here as the Departmentʼs first Counselor for
Racial Equity. Advancing equity for historically underserved people and places is a priority for
the Biden-Harris Administration and for the Treasury Department. We believe our e orts have
delivered real results that aim to expand opportunities for all Americans to fully participate
and compete in the 21st century economy.
Our work at Treasury is driven by an economic philosophy Secretary Yellen calls “Modern
Supply Side Economics,” which recognizes that a key element of our economic growth going
forward will come from investing in people, places, and infrastructure that have been
marginalized, overlooked, and underestimated. This includes our nationʼs numerous Latino
communities.
This is not only a moral imperative, but also an economic necessity. For example, according to
McKinsey, Latinos are estimated to account for more than one in four people in the United
States by 2050 and one in three of its workers by 2060.
In June, the Treasury Department partnered with the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and
several other coalition groups to host the Departmentʼs Latino Economic Summit. This was an
important opportunity to reflect on the unique economic challenges and opportunities facing
Latino families, businesses, and neighborhoods.
We share a collective understanding that when we unleash the economic potential of Latino
communities – itʼs not just good for our families, but for our entire economy. In order to build
an economy that truly works for all, we must fix the broken systems that sideline too many of
our families, businesses, and communities.
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For the Biden-Harris Administration, this strategy started with prioritizing an equitable
recovery. I donʼt have to remind this group how challenging the situation was at the beginning
of 2021 when President Biden took o ice.
Latino unemployment reached an all-time high and Latino workers were overrepresented in
frontline jobs exposed to COVID-19. In fact, Latinos were 2.3x more likely than white
Americans to die from the disease. Many Latino-led non-profits banded together to support
vaccine distribution, employment support and training, and care for children and families who
were displaced.
We worked together to ensure Latino communities could take advantage of American Rescue
Plan resources such as the Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) Program and Homeowner
Assistance Fund (HAF) – all while ensuring that residents of Puerto Rico were able to benefit
from these programs as well.
In order to prevent evictions and foreclosures among Latino and other communities, we
encouraged state and local ERA and HAF programs to use data to identify community needs,
invest in culturally relevant partners, and work with Hispanic media, unions, and faith leaders
to reach families most in need.
Our e orts paid o . These programs helped keep Latino families in their homes, preventing
the kind of massive displacement and wealth loss we saw between 2008 and 2012. Research
has found that nearly one-third of ERA rental assistance funds went to Hispanic households,
and 20 percent of homeowners assisted by the HAF program self-identified as Hispanic.
This is deeply personal for me. During the years of the Great Recession, I was leading the
e ort at UnidosUS – then National Council of La Raza – to secure new mortgage protections
for Latino families and hosting foreclosure rescue fairs in Latino communities around the
country. I authored a report on the impact of foreclosures on Latino families and children. I
sat with families who lost everything, and it was utterly heartbreaking. The fact that we
avoided massive evictions and foreclosures this time around was not a foregone conclusion –
it took deliberate policy and partnerships with trusted organizations.
During this Administration, we have taken significant steps to not just recover, but to build a
fairer economy. And even as there is more to do, we have made progress. Our work has led to
the most equitable, broad-based economic recovery in modern history. Hispanic
unemployment hit a record low last September. From 2019 to 2022, median weekly earnings

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Remarks by Treasury Department’s Counselor for Racial Equity Janis Bowdler at the 2023 U.S. Hispanic Chamber of C…

increased 2.4 percent for Hispanic workers a er accounting for inflation. And nearly onequarter of all new entrepreneurs in 2021 were Latino.
We are taking these lessons and applying them to opportunities to build assets and
intergenerational wealth through key Biden-Harris initiatives such the Bipartisan
Infrastructure Law (BIL), CHIPS and Science Act, and Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
I want to share with you five key initiatives at the center of this strategy:
First, weʼre responding to the two things small businesses need most – access to customers
and capital.
The State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI), reauthorized and expanded by the
American Rescue Plan, provides nearly $10 billion to states, the District of Columbia,
territories, and Tribal governments to increase access to capital and promote
entrepreneurship. This includes $2.5 billion in funding and incentives to support
underserved businesses.
SSBCI also includes $200 million for eligible jurisdictions to provide technical assistance to
underserved entrepreneurs and very small businesses. And Treasury has partnered with
the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) to provide an additional $125 million
for MBDAʼs Capital Readiness grant program to help minority and other underserved
entrepreneurs launch and scale their businesses.
Through the Interagency Community Investment Committee (ICIC), weʼve adopted a “no
wrong door” policy to ensure that small businesses and entrepreneurs get the assistance
and information most relevant to them. Through ICIC, six agencies – including Treasury –
are collaborating across our nationwide network of field o ices to provide easy-to-use
information guides and train sta on the full suite of federal capital products and
technical assistance programs.
The Treasury Department is also doing more business with Latino-owned companies, as
part of the administrationʼs broader e orts to substantially increase procurement
opportunities with small and disadvantaged businesses. There has been a 23 percent
increase in the dollar amount of prime contracts Treasury awarded to Hispanic-owned
businesses since FY 2020.
Second, weʼre deploying mission capital via Latino-owned and -serving financial institutions
to develop health clinics, day care centers, a ordable housing, and support small business.

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Remarks by Treasury Department’s Counselor for Racial Equity Janis Bowdler at the 2023 U.S. Hispanic Chamber of C…

Through the Emergency Capital Investment Program (ECIP), Treasury has invested $1.6
billion in Latino-owned and Latino-majority shareholder depository institutions. Based on
preliminary analysis, we project that investments across the entire ECIP portfolio may
increase lending in Latino communities by nearly $58 billion over the next decade.
We recently announced over $1.73 billion in grant awards through the Community
Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund) Equitable Recovery Program (ERP).
That includes a historic investment of $226 million in grants to 69 cooperativas in Puerto
Rico.
Earlier this summer, Deputy Secretary Adeyemo joined Senators Warner and Crapo to
announce that the Economic Opportunity Coalition (EOC), a group of more than two
dozen companies and foundations, reached their goal of securing $1 billion in deposits
into community development financial institutions (CDFIs) and minority depository
institutions (MDIs) to help them further their mission to deliver capital to underserved
communities.
Third, weʼre modernizing our tax system to emphasize benefit access and delivery for our
most vulnerable. During the pandemic, Treasury steered the deployment of funds that kept
the economy afloat, such as the American Rescue Plan-expanded Child Tax Credit (CTC),
Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), and targeted relief payments to families and workers. But
for too long, the IRS has not had the tools or resources needed to provide world class service.
Earlier this year, the IRS laid out a modern vision that puts fairness and accessibility at the
forefront of our tax system – which has been made possible by funding through the Inflation
Reduction Act. This looks like:
Enhancing taxpayer interaction in languages other than English. Scaling outreach to
ensure equal access to IRS services and opportunities for all communities.
Becoming fully digital and improving the taxpayer experience and organizational e iciency
– including exploring modernizing the Individual Tax Identification Number (ITIN) process.
Developing a limited scope pilot that would allow people to file taxes directly with the IRS
rather than having to rely on a third-party provider. When shown a prototype of this
product, those with limited English proficiency were more likely to be interested in a
Direct File option than other potential filers.
Expanding free tax return preparation sites in Puerto Rico. In fact, the IRS went from 10 in
2021 to more than 250 in 2022.

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Remarks by Treasury Department’s Counselor for Racial Equity Janis Bowdler at the 2023 U.S. Hispanic Chamber of C…

Fourth, weʼre helping deliver lower energy costs and economic growth to low-income
communities through the Inflation Reduction Act, one of the most significant economic
investments in generations most ambitious climate investment in our nationʼs history.
As we work to implement climate investments delivered via tax incentives, we are focused on
creating opportunities for all Americans to share in the gains from the transition to a green
economy – through tax credits, business opportunities, and good, middle-class jobs in clean
energy fields. Over the past several months, Treasury has released:
Final rules for the 48(e) Low-Income Communities Bonus Credit Program. This program is
key to ensuring all Americans benefit from the growth of the clean energy economy and
boosts the Investment Tax Credit (ITC) for solar and wind energy projects in underserved
communities by up to 20 percentage points. Applications for the program will open this
fall;
proposed guidance on direct pay and transferability, which will allow communities,
through tax-exempt and government entities, to take advantage of the clean energy tax
credits directly for the first time;
proposed rules on the IRAʼs enhanced incentives for projects that pay prevailing wages
and employ registered apprentices. The proposed rules provide workers and employers
with more clarity on IRS guardrails, incentivize employers to adopt worker-centric
practices, and ensure compliance is streamlined.
Finally, the investments I described present important opportunities for Latino families,
businesses, and communities to share in the prosperity of our nation. A key aspect of my role
is to ensure that this progress is not fleeting with a single Administration. We are weaving
racial equity into the fabric of Treasury by strengthening our understanding of the challenges
facing historically under-invested communities and building a team of career professionals to
sustain Treasuryʼs e orts over time.
Cesar Chavez famously told us: “We cannot seek achievement for ourselves and forget about
progress and prosperity for our community. Our ambitions must be broad enough to include
the aspirations and needs of others, for their sakes and for our own.” My hope is that
together, we can advance strategies that invest in and elevate the marginalized and
underestimated. This is how we will build an economy that truly works for all.
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