February 28, 2013
Sequestration is the Wrong Kind of Certainty for Small Business
Limiting
job creators' access to capital at this critical point in the life of our
nation's economy is a profoundly bad idea.
By Beth Solomon
Beth Solomon is the
president and CEO of the National Association of Development Companies, the
trade association of Certified Development Companies.By Beth Solomon
You've heard the S-word.
In Washington, this week, it is "sequester"—the threat of sweeping,
indiscriminate federal budget cuts that could furlough federal employees,
airport workers, and first responders, and impact the national defense and
medical research. But what about the sequester's impact on the engine of the
U.S. economy: small business? Drastic uncertainty for small business owners and
reductions in available capital could put a jackboot on the neck of the U.S.
economy, just as it struggles for momentum.
According to the Office
of Management and Budget, the sequester could mean a reduction of
nearly $1 billion in small business loans. In addition, loan
processors could be furloughed, which would mean even more delays to ongoing
small business lending. The long-term damage to small businesses could be
acute.
With over 12 million
people unemployed, small business is critical to accelerating the economic
recovery and creating the jobs America needs. According to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, small businesses have created about two out of every three jobs
gained over the past 35 months and have added jobs in every quarter since early
2010.
But since the recession
began, U.S. commercial banks' small business loan portfolios are down 17
percent. And loans under $100,000 have declined even more steeply, over 19
percent. During that same period, the Small Business Administration supported
over $100 billion in new lending to over 218,000 small businesses. In better
times considered the lender of last resort, the Small Business Administration,
for many small businesses, has become the only option. The agency's
loans have become a lifeline for the franchise industry and other segments that
weathered the recession better than most.In 2012, nearly 10,000 businesses—many of whom couldn't find adequate financing from banks, accessed over $6 billion through Small Business Administration's 504 loans, financing real estate, construction, and equipment.
For Warner Bodies, a
manufacturer of utility truck cabs, fire and rescue trucks in Noblesville,
Ind., access to capital came the form of a Small Business Administration 504
loan which allowed them to get game-changing rates on a loan for expanding
their plant and purchasing more equipment. This created 15 jobs. In the midst
of a recession, this company not only retained all of their employees, they
hired more.
In Michigan, Fiber
By-Products, a wood fiber recycling company, accessed the agency's 504
financing to purchase 43,500 additional square feet of workspace, creating 28
new jobs as a result.
There are
countless stories like these about real jobs in communities all
across the country, created because these growing small businesses could access
the capital and economic certainty they need to invest in their business, from
property, equipment to the most important resource of all: people.
This kind of
public-private partnership that the Small Business Administration's loan
programs represent are precisely the kind of smart government initiatives that
we need.
The reality is that
business growth is not a switch that policymakers in Washington or business
leaders anywhere can turn on or off, and any economic progress takes multiple
business cycles of learning to navigate regulations, securing funding, and
laying out a strategic plan. To delay loans for the growing small businesses,
or worse, eliminate them altogether, would cripple our economy. For many of
these small businesses, they may not get a second chance at growth.
Limiting job creators'
access to capital at this critical point in the life of our nation's economy is
a profoundly bad idea. We are depending on our small businesses to grow and put
our communities back to work. They are depending on Small Business
Administration loans to finance their physical growth: real estate and
machinery. And we are all depending on our elected leaders to put aside their
risky, partisan gamesmanship and come together to pass legislation and enact
policy in a bipartisan, responsible way that reflects our national needs and
priorities.
I've often heard that uncertainty is bad
for business, but the Washington gridlock and its latest symptom,
sequestration, is the wrong kind of certainty.
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2013/02/28/sequestration-negatively-impacts-small-business-and-job-creation?utm_source=March+1%2C+2013+CRM&utm_campaign=082412+AM&utm_medium=email
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