Showing posts with label Small Business Jobs Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Small Business Jobs Act. Show all posts

Entrepreneurs: Building Businesses, Creating Jobs, Strengthening Our Economy

Ed. Note: This week the Obama Administration celebrating America’s entrepreneurs and small businesses as part of National Entrepreneurship Week.

I’m thrilled that we’re taking time this week – as a nation – to support and celebrate America’s entrepreneurial spirit. Entrepreneurs and small business owners continue to drive innovation, strengthen our competitive edge, and create good jobs here at home.

These entrepreneurs need access to capital in order to start and grow their small businesses. When a small business loan gets approved, they get the lines of credit to buy space and equipment and to hire more workers. It’s an exciting moment.

Because of the Recovery Act, the SBA was able to work with its lending partners to provide nearly 70,000 SBA loans to entrepreneurs and small business owners to help them do just that. And now, under the new Small Business Jobs Act, the SBA has already approved 7,000 more SBA loans in just two months.

Noel and Glen Mouritzen are a good example. They attended the event where the President signed the Jobs Act. They’re using their new Jobs Act loan to set up a repair shop for helicopter fuel systems near an airport in Virginia. As a result, they’re planning to hire four or five new workers.

In addition, by strengthening a network of growth capital firms – called Small Business Investment Companies – we’ve reached a 50-year record high of nearly $1.6 billion in overall financing to high-growth small firms in Fiscal Year 2010.

And it’s not just SBA that is playing an active role in the success stories of America’s entrepreneurs. Other federal agencies have unique lending programs, too.

All of us throughout the Administration know that it’s more important than ever to help entrepreneurs and small business owners get the capital they need to grow and create jobs.

If you want to find out more about SBA loans – as well as other help we can provide through opportunities in federal contracting and one-on-one counseling for small businesses – I’d encourage you to visit www.sba.gov.

And our commitment throughout the Administration is this. We will continue to help America’s entrepreneurs find the tools they need to do what they do best: build their businesses, create jobs, and strengthen our economy.

More Small Business Community Questions Answered

On September 29th, I had the opportunity to sit down with Scott Roen from American Express OPEN to answer questions about The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 and opportunities available for small businesses under the Recovery Act and Affordable Care Act.

There were a number of great questions we weren't able to get to during the Open for Questions chat, so we thought we'd address a few more here:

  1. Ira in Florida asked:
    Now that many of those banks have stabilized, what incentive do they have to lend to small businesses, as credit has been impossible to get for the past 24-36 months in the small business sector?


Here at the SBA, we know that too many small businesses have still been having trouble getting the loans they need. That’s why we’re working hard to increase businesses’ access to capital. The Recovery Act, which raised our loan guarantees and reduced our fees, helped put nearly $30 billion in the hands of small businesses. 1,300 lenders who hadn’t made an SBA loan since 2007 returned to SBA lending.

The Small Business Jobs Act, signed by the President last month, includes a number of provisions that will help put capital in the hands of small businesses. These include the Small Business Lending Fund, which will provide capital to smaller, community banks so they can increase their own small business lending. We know these small lenders are some of the strongest partners for small businesses in their communities. The Jobs Act also increases the maximum size of SBA’s microloans, and strengthens our loans for working capital, mortgage financing and other needs.

SBA has already begun funding Jobs Act loans with the increased guarantee and raised fees that were so successful under the Recovery Act. When the Jobs Act was signed, there were nearly 2,000 small businesses in our loan queue, waiting for loans with these enhancements. SBA has already cleared out the queue, approving nearly a billion dollars in loans to small businesses.

  1. Neena in Virginia asked:
    We would like to know how the US government plans to create an environment that is pro small business. Today, although much is mentioned about the importance of small business, very little financial/tax-based support is provided to the small business owner.


Small businesses are the engine of our economy. We’re counting on small businesses to grow our economy, create jobs, and pull us towards a full recovery. That’s why this Administration has been dedicated to supporting small businesses. In the past two years, the President has cut taxes for small businesses eight times, and the Small Business Jobs Act contains eight more tax breaks. This includes zero taxes on capital gains from key small business investments, an increase in the deduction for start-up expenses, deductions for providing cell phones to employees, accelerated “bonus” depreciation, and more.

  1. Bill in Arizona asked:
    Administrator Mills, How long do you expect it to take the SBA to generate and distribute the rules for handling the larger 7(a) and 504 loan limits?


The Small Business Jobs Act permanently increases the maximum loan sizes in our top two programs, 7(a) and 504, from $2 million to $5 million. Increased loan sizes will help many small businesses who need more capital, such as manufacturers, exporters, contractors and franchisers.

SBA has already begun funding these larger loans, and we are looking forward to implementing more pieces of the Jobs Act in the weeks and months ahead.

  1. Shante in New York asked:
    As a women owned minority business owner, I find that only 5% of the loans are being granted to my population. I am in need of working capital and want to apply for a 7(a) to expand my company. However, with the current trends, the odds are not in my favor of being granted. Is the SBA looking into the lending institutions and/or their own agency to further probe why such a huge imbalance exist?


SBA is committed to helping women and minority entrepreneurs and small business owners get the capital they need. In fact, women and minorities are 3 to 5 times more likely to receive a loan if it’s guaranteed by the SBA. 18% of our Recovery loans, worth more than $3 billion, went to women-owned businesses, and billions more went to minority-owned businesses.

The Small Business Jobs Act enhances our ability to get working capital in the hands of small businesses by increasing our guarantee on 7(a) loans, reducing our fees, and raising the size limit of many of our loans. We’ve heard time and again from business owners that these provisions will help them secure the capital they need.

In addition, SBA’s resource partners, including 110 Women’s Business Centers, nearly 900 Small Business Development Centers, and 350 chapters of SCORE, can help you write a plan for growth and prepare your loan application. We want women and minority business owners to get the loans they need, but at SBA, we’re also there to help you along the way.

More Than 5,000 SBA Jobs Act Loans Approved in First Month

Just one month after the President signed the Small Business Jobs Act, SBA has supported nearly $3 billion in loans to more than 5,000 small businesses across the country. That’s more than 5,000 small business owners who’ve felt first-hand, within one month, the impact this new law is having on our economy: from Peabody Engineering, a tank and fiberglass manufacturer in Southern California that is using a Jobs Act loan to hire 10 more workers, to Caudill Web Design here in our nation’s capital, who will use their Jobs Act loan to hire more programmers to meet increased demand.

So, how did we do it? With the Recovery Act, we learned that raising the guarantee and waiving the fees in SBA’s top two loan programs was a formula for success. With the Recovery Act funding and extensions of funding from Congress, we turned just $680 million in taxpayer dollars into nearly $30 billion in lending support through our lending partners.

That’s a big bang for the taxpayer buck. The Jobs Act builds on that success by extending those same loan enhancements.

This is a critical investment in America’s biggest job creators and in the strongest engine of economic recovery: entrepreneurs and small business owners. By unlocking loans for these small businesses, we are providing them with the tools they need to grow their business and create new jobs in their local communities.

In all, we estimate the $505 million provided in the Jobs Act for these loan enhancements will support about $14 billion in small business loans. That’s a $14-billion boost for America’s small businesses and just one of the reasons that the passage of this new law was a top priority for President Obama. The Jobs Act also includes $12 billion in tax credits targeted specifically to small businesses and a $30-billion lending fund that will help small, community banks increase their lending to local small business owners and entrepreneurs.

As the President has said, government can’t guarantee the success of a small business, but it can knock down some of the barriers that stand in the way and help create the conditions where small businesses can grow and hire. The Small Business Jobs Act is a critical tool to help us do just that, and we are already seeing its impact with the loans SBA approves every day.

Learn more facts about how small businesses are benefiting from the Small Business Jobs Act at www.sba.gov/jobsact.

A Task Force on Veteran Small Business Development

On Friday, we held the first public meeting of the President’s Interagency Task Force on Veteran Small Business Development.

The need for this task force is clear. America’s service men and women are returning home and using the skills they honed while on active duty to start their own businesses. Many more veterans have owned businesses for years. Our commitment is to be there as a partner along the way as they start and grow their businesses, create jobs, and drive our economy forward.

The Task Force is divided into six committees, each focusing on one of the objectives outlined by the President in his executive order. This includes expanding access to capital, increasing federal contracting opportunities, and reducing the paperwork burden for federal programs. We will be asking tough questions of our agencies, talking with the veteran community, and listening to the public.

Already, there have been some good ideas. Among other topics, we discussed how we can help veterans take advantage of programs in the Small Business Jobs Act, which will put billions of dollars in the hands of small business owners. Meanwhile Sue Hoppin, of the National Military Spouse Network, brought up the need to focus outreach not just on veterans but on their families and spouses as well, because veterans turn to these support networks first.

The task force will send a report with its recommendations to the President once every year. Overall, our goal is to build on what works, fix what doesn’t, and find new ways to get veteran entrepreneurs and small business owners the tools they need to succeed. President Obama has said that “our nation’s commitment to our veterans is a sacred trust, and upholding that trust is a moral obligation.” Part of that means ensuring that our veterans have the tools and resources they need to start businesses and take hold of their piece of the American dream that they fought so honorably to protect.

One Week Later, Nearly 2,000 Small Businesses Approved for SBA Loans Due to Jobs Act

Late yesterday, just a week after President Obama signed the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, nearly 2,000 small business owners who had been waiting for SBA-backed loans had been approved and will soon have those loan funds – totaling nearly $1 billion – in hand. That’s a quick turnaround, and it’s an example of this Administration’s deep commitment to giving entrepreneurs and small business owners the support they need to grow and create jobs.

Here’s how we made it happen.

After the Recovery Act passed last year, SBA increased the guarantee and reduced the fees in our top two loan programs. That two-part formula worked. We saw a significant rebound in SBA lending, helping unlock much-needed capital for small businesses. All told, SBA took just $680 million in taxpayer dollars and turned it into nearly $30 billion in lending support to about 70,000 small businesses. That’s a strong bang for the taxpayer buck.

Even though Congress renewed funding for the increased guarantee and waived fees several times, SBA had to stop making these loans in May when the agency’s authority for the higher guarantees ended. Shortly thereafter, the funds for fee waivers were used up. As a result, we had to start putting applicants on a stand-by waiting list – a “queue” – hoping that these successful loan enhancements would once again be available.

Over the summer, that queue grew to include more than 1,000 entrepreneurs and small business owners. The Administration continued to push for Congress to pass a small business jobs bill, knowing that these small businesses – and many more – were ready to start growing and creating jobs as soon as they got their SBA loan.

Finally, last week, with the stroke of the President’s pen, the SBA got $505 million more for these effective and proven enhancements, which will support an estimated $14 billion in new lending.

As of late yesterday, just one week later, we had pushed out nearly 2,000 loans – clearing out all the loans in the queue. And, today we’re moving ahead with approving thousands more SBA Jobs Act loans. With each loan, we’re putting capital in the hands of America’s entrepreneurs and small business owners so they can continue to drive economic growth and create jobs in communities all across the country. And this is just one of the many benefits in the Small Business Jobs Act, which can now deliver $55 billion in tax cuts and additional assistance for businesses that need loans.

West Wing Week: "One Two Three ... Lancers!"

Welcome to the West Wing Week, your guide to everything that's happening at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Walk step by step with the President as he signs the Small Business Jobs Act, speaks to college journalists, holds backyard discussions about the economy with area families across the heartland and much more...


For more information on the events in this edition of West Wing Week, check out the links below:

Monday, September 27th, 2010

Monday, September 27th, 2010

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Economic Recovery for Small Businesses: Now is Not the Time to Pull Back

As I travel around the country, I meet many small business owners who are poised to take that next step to grow their business and create jobs. In fact, this morning’s USA Today looks at one of those business owners - Amarjit Kaur who runs a convenience store and gas station in Wood Village, OR. Amarjit has been approved for an SBA loan so she can buy the property she now leases. But today her application sits in a queue waiting for passage of the Small Business Jobs Act currently before the Senate.

Here’s what’s happening: Up until a few months ago, SBA was able to waive the fees for SBA loan borrowers. This allowed small business owners to put more money back into their business. In fact, these fee reductions will save Amarjit about $35,000. At the same time, we were able to increase the government guarantee on SBA loans, to encourage more banks and credit unions to go ahead and make SBA loans to good, creditworthy small businesses.

This worked. SBA lenders approved about 70,000 SBA Recovery loans for small businesses since the Recovery Act passed, nearly $30 billion in total. And, we brought more than 1,300 lenders back to making SBA loans at a time when other banks were cutting back their small business lending.

Unfortunately, the funding for these popular enhancements ran out at the end of May – just when small business owners like Amarjit needed it. With support in Congress for extending these successful loan enhancements, we started the Recovery Loan Queue, a stand-by list just like at the airport.

Today, that list is at nearly 1,000 small businesses long, including Amarjit’s, totaling almost $500 million in loans. With the passage of the Small Business Jobs Act, SBA will be able to fund these loans. Additionally, among other programs, the Act will create the Small Business Lending Fund to provide additional capital to small, community banks so they can boost their lending to small businesses locally.

As Amarjit’s story points out, now is not the time to pull back. In communities all across the country there are business owners just like her who are in a position to do exactly what our economy needs them to do – grow and create jobs. With the Small Business Jobs Act, we can be the very partner these business owners need by giving them the tools to continue to drive our economic recovery.

Distorting the Small Business Jobs Act

America’s small businesses are essential to our nation’s economy and its recovery. They create two out or every three new jobs in the private sector. Their ability to hire and expand is crucial to putting our economy back on the right track. But in the wake of this recession, too many small businesses are struggling to find the loans they need to strengthen their companies.
And that’s why President Obama has called on the Senate to swiftly approve the Small Business Jobs Act – a set of tax breaks and lending incentives designed to spur hiring and growth at small businesses.
As we continue to fight for essential assistance to small businesses we know there will be a lot of misinformation and given what is at stake we want to provide the real facts.
Below is a point by point fact check of a story about the small business legislation the AP ran this weekend:
FICTION: “Congress is at work on a new program that would send $30 billion to struggling community banks”
FACT: To participate, a bank’s Federal regulator must deem it viable – helping to protect taxpayer investments and ensure that they can increase lending. Indeed, Treasury and the Administration have opposed any program that has a focus on “bailing out” struggling banks rather than supporting viable institutions that will extend more credit.
When banking groups or Members of Congress have proposed legislation that requires Treasury to allow weaker banks to participate, the Administration strongly and successfully opposed these measures. For example, when an amendment was added to the House bill to allow small banks to be able to put off recognizing losses in impaired real estate loans, the Secretary of the Treasury publicly and strongly opposed it, and worked so that this measure was not included in the Senate bill. In fact, the Administration supported in the House and Senate language that explicitly prohibits banks on the FDIC’s problem list from participating.
FICTION: “Yet under the new program, the 775 banks on the government's ’problem’ list could qualify for bailouts for the first time.”
FACT: The legislation explicitly states that “an eligible institution may not receive any capital investment under the Program, if (i) such institution is on the FDIC problem bank list; or (ii) such institution has been removed from the FDIC problem bank list for less than 90 days.”
FICTION: “For banks in the hardest-hit areas, it can be nearly impossible to recover once too many loans sour. Yet the bill would require that banks be protected against "discrimination based on geography." It says the money must be available to lenders in areas with high unemployment.”
FACT: The legislation requires that regulators or Treasury not “discriminate” on the basis of a bank’s location. It does not remotely suggest that a weak bank can get capital simply because it is in a high unemployment area or distressed location. Not even close. To the contrary, the legislation is crystal clear that every bank must stand on its own and pass the same consistent, uniform viability test administered by its regulator – no matter where it is located. In addition, Treasury anticipates that the application process would allow for other Federal regulators to confirm the primary regulator’s decision where necessary.
FICTION: “Many community banks are overseen by state regulators struggling under budget cuts and limited expertise. Many are ill-equipped to monitor banks during a crisis”
FACT: The legislation makes clear that every bank’s primary Federal regulator would play the key role in determining whether or not an institution was eligible for the program – not state regulators. In addition, the legislation provides for strong oversight by the Treasury Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office – institutions with extensive experience in overseeing programs that require similar expertise as the SBLF.
FICTION: “This time, money is more likely to disappear as a result of bank failures or fraud”
FACT: The independent Congressional Budget Office – which initially projected significant losses under TARP’s Capital Purchase Program (even though it now forecasts taxpayer savings for the program) has estimated that the Small Business Lending Fund would provide taxpayers with $1.1 billion in savings over 10 years. While CBO acknowledged there were other ways to do such scoring, the way the CBO chose and – by which Congress must abide – found that this program would not cost the taxpayer a penny.
FICTION: “It's supposedly reserved for banks deemed ‘viable.’ But regulators won't consider whether banks are viable now.”
FACT: The only way a community bank (under $1 billion in assets) can get access to the full 5 percent of Risk-Weighted Assets in the program is to be found to be viable before it receives any government capital.
The Senate Legislation provides one narrow exception to this rule: in cases where a bank’s Federal regulator determines that the bank has sufficiently strong management and solid long-term prospects – but nevertheless has a small capital shortfall – the legislation allows the bank to get government capital equal 3% of risk-weighted assets provided that private investors will invest the same amount, dollar-for-dollar. So not only must the government determine that the bank is otherwise viable, but private sector investors must be willing to contemporaneously put in at least as much of their own private sector capital at risk as the government for the bank to be eligible. Furthermore, the new private capital must be junior to the government’s investment – meaning that Treasury gets repaid in full before any other new investors. Indeed, when the Congressional Budget Office reviewed this new proposal, because of these protections, they did not think this narrow exception would add any costs to the program at all. None.
FICTION: “But Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and others have questioned whether the problem is lack of capital, or if there simply aren't enough creditworthy borrowers.”
FACT: As Chairman Bernanke himself stated last month: “it seems clear that some creditworthy businesses--including some whose collateral has lost value but whose cash flows remain strong--have had difficulty obtaining the credit that they need to expand, and in some cases, even to continue operating.”
Indeed, the National Federation of Independent Business – which reported in a survey earlier this year that 45 percent of small businesses found that their borrowing needs were not being satisfied – stated recently that “the lending fund has the potential to help credit-worthy small businesses that have had difficulties obtaining credit, which is a good thing.” At the same time, the Small Business Jobs Act is designed specifically to address the range of problems facing small businesses – which is why it includes a series of targeted tax incentives for new investments, enhancements to SBA programs, and a new State Small Business Credit Initiative in addition to the SBLF.
FICTION: “The administration's haziness about whom the program benefits has fueled comparisons to the $700 billion bailout known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.”
FACT: The Administration has been very clear about the intent of this program: it is to stimulate lending to small businesses by providing capital and incentives to the community banks on Main Street that make these loans. Indeed, the design of the program has been very explicit in addressing this goal – the program is directed only at small banks, which do the overwhelming amount of their commercial lending to small businesses, and the benefits banks receive are linked directly to their lending to small businesses. Loans over $10 million or to businesses with revenues over $50 million would not be counted.
FICTION: One source quoted in AP story stated, "What we lack here is oversight and true accountability."
FACT: There is no doubt that the legislation establishing the Small Business Lending Fund would provide for strong oversight and accountability. As a new program established through new legislation separate from TARP, the Small Business Lending Fund – in addition to requiring a small business lending plan from participants and regular reports on the impact of SBLF capital – would be subject to robust oversight from the Treasury Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office. These two bodies have a strong record of expertise and experience suited to the task of overseeing this program. For example, Treasury Inspector General Eric Thorson – nominated by President Bush in 2007 – has substantial experience and existing responsibilities relevant to monitoring a program like the SBLF: overseeing the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, conducting material loss reviews of Treasury-regulated financial institutions that cause losses over $25 million to the FDIC’s deposit insurance fund, and ensuring accountability for Recovery Act programs overseen by Treasury, to name a few.