PayPal will waive $30 million in processing fees for $1 billion in small business transactions as part of a new settlement with the Department of Justice (DOJ) signed on May 12. The settlement resolves a DOJ investigation into PayPal over a 2020 program that guaranteed a $530 million investment for Black and minority-owned businesses. The government claimed that the program was unlawful under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, which bars credit discrimination based in part on race or ethnicity. PayPal will launch a new program for veteran-owned small businesses or those in farming, manufacturing, or technology. However, the settlement stipulates that PayPal admits to no wrongdoing and will not pay a separate fine to the federal government. The agreement comes just one month after IBM agreed to pay $17 million in damages to the DOJ over its DEI programming, HR Brew reported previously. While the PayPal settlement is different from that with IBM, David Glasgow, co-founder of the Meltzer Center for Diversity, Inclusion and Belonging at New York University School of Law, told HR Brew that the two are linked. For more on the settlement, keep reading here.—KP |