PayPal has reached a settlement with the US Department of Justice over the company’s 2020 Economic Opportunity Fund, a program designed to support Black and minority-owned businesses. The resolution effectively ends a federal investigation into whether PayPal’s use of race and national origin as eligibility criteria ran afoul of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act.
PayPal wasn’t found to have broken the law. The DOJ preserved its right to future enforcement actions under ECOA but did not determine that the company was legally at fault. PayPal admitted no wrongdoing.
What the settlement actually requires
Under the terms of the deal, PayPal will create a new Small Business Initiative. The company will waive $30 million in processing fees across $1 billion in transactions.
The original Economic Opportunity Fund explicitly targeted Black and minority-owned businesses. The replacement program strips out any eligibility criteria based on race or national origin. Instead, PayPal’s new initiative will focus on veteran-owned small businesses and companies operating in farming, manufacturing, and technology.
PayPal is also required to appoint a dedicated director for the initiative and provide ECOA training to employees involved in the program.
The backstory: corporate America’s 2020 pledges meet legal reality
In June 2020, following the murder of George Floyd and the nationwide protests that followed, PayPal launched its Economic Opportunity Fund, pledging $530 million to channel financial support toward minority-owned businesses.
The Equal Credit Opportunity Act, passed in 1974, prohibits creditors from discriminating against applicants on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, or age. The DOJ’s investigation into PayPal centered on whether fee waivers and other financial benefits tied to race-based criteria constituted a form of credit discrimination under this statute.
What this means for investors and the broader market
For PayPal shareholders, the direct financial impact is negligible. The settlement carries no fine, no penalty, and no admission of liability.
Companies that launched race-based financial support programs in 2020 now have a clear template for what the DOJ considers acceptable. Demographic-based eligibility is out. Sector-based, geography-based, or service-based criteria are in.
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