Also Read | How hunger came back to haunt IndiaHouseholds and WorkersDirect PaymentsThe legislation would authorize a second round of economic-impact payments, following the checks Americans received in the spring and summer, at a cost of $166 billion.Households would receive $600 for each adult and $600 for each dependent, instead of $1,200 and $500, respectively, in the first round.
Mixed-status households, where some people are ineligible noncitizens, would get payments based on the number of eligible people in the households, as opposed to being shut out as they were in the first round.The payments would be based on income from 2019 and begin phasing out for individuals with adjusted gross incomes over $75,000 and married couples over.