Policy experts unimpressed with SBA’s ‘record’ capital delivered to small businesses

Policy experts unimpressed with SBA’s ‘record’ capital delivered to small businesses

Spread the love

The Small Business Administration announced it will close Fiscal Year 2025 with record-breaking capital delivered to small businesses, but policy experts are unimpressed by the news.

Heritage Foundation senior fellow in economic policy David Burton told The Center Square that “the primary purpose of the SBA should be to work to reduce regulatory and other impediments to small business formation and growth,” and explained that “the SBA Office of Advocacy does this.”

Burton said, however, that “the primary function of the SBA today is to provide taxpayer funds to businesses – in other words, corporate welfare.”

“While the SBA’s budget is a small fraction of the corporate welfare provided to large corporations, [its] budget should not be expanded and corporate welfare is not a wise use of taxpayer money,” Burton said.

Cato Institute policy analyst Tad DeHaven went a step further and told The Center Square that “the US Small Business Administration should be abolished.”

“It was created in 1953 to give politicians a way to claim they care about small businesses, and the administration’s self-laudatory press release shows that it hasn’t changed,” DeHaven said.

“At least, the lending programs should be ended because the benefits disproportionately flow to participating lenders and a small subset of firms,” DeHaven said. “Private markets can provide adequate credit without federal involvement.”

“Moreover, the federal government should be neutral,” DeHaven said. “There’s no reason, for example, for the government to back a loan for a particular pizza shop – especially when the competing pizza shop down the street relied on completely private financing.”

According to an SBA press release, the agency in total for Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 “has guaranteed 84,400 7(a) and 504 small business loans for $44.8 billion.”

“This includes 6,750 504 loans for $7.8 billion and 77,600 7(a) loans for $37 billion,” the release said.

“The majority of SBA’s FY25 small business loans were approved after President Trump took office in January 2025,” the release said, with “58,000 7(a) and 504 loans,” being approved under him, “representing more than $32 billion in capital delivered to America’s small businesses.”

DeHaven told The Center Square that “in the broader context of small-business finance, SBA loan-guarantee programs account for a small share of total credit flows.”

“Access to credit is typically not the top concern reported by small firms, compared with issues such as costs and labor,” DeHaven said.

“The federal loan guarantees primarily benefit participating lenders (e.g., through reduced risk and secondary market liquidity), and some loans would likely have been made even without the guarantee,” DeHaven said.

“It’s no coincidence that bank lobbyists are major advocates for the SBA’s loan guarantee programs on Capitol Hill,” DeHaven told The Center Square.

In its release, the SBA said that “since January, this Administration has created over 500,000 private sector jobs, increased real wages month after month, and boosted small business optimism above its 52-year average to a six-month high,” the release said.

At the same time, Tad DeHaven told The Center Square that “recent surveys show cautious improvement in sentiment, but small businesses continue to report concerns about inflation, input/material costs, and policy uncertainty.”

The SBA has not yet responded to The Center Square’s request for comment.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Chicago inspector general hopes for urgency to address OT mistakes

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago’s inspector general says she hopes there is urgency to correct mistakes after the city paid $26.5...

Poll shows most Americans support legal limits to abortion

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Pro-life groups celebrate the 53rd annual March for Life event in the wake of a Knights of Columbus-Marist Poll showing that most Americans support legal...
Bill would give parents access to expulsion evidence

Bill would give parents access to expulsion evidence

By Cat Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers are weighing legislation that would require public schools to share all evidence used to...
WATCH: Pritzker IDs half billion in ‘reserves;’ SCOTUS considering gun ban challenge

WATCH: Pritzker IDs half billion in ‘reserves;’ SCOTUS considering gun ban challenge

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square's Greg Bishop discusses a recent announcement...
Proposed Illinois bill would let local voters approve rent control, drawing sharp criticism

Proposed Illinois bill would let local voters approve rent control, drawing sharp criticism

By Cat Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposed Illinois bill, the “Let the People Lift the Ban Act," SB2884, would let local...
Businesses close in Minnesota for anti-ICE ‘economic blackout’

Businesses close in Minnesota for anti-ICE ‘economic blackout’

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Many businesses across Minnesota closed today as part of an ‘economic blackout’ to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. This comes in response to calls...
House GOP: Climate lawyers could be improperly influencing judges

House GOP: Climate lawyers could be improperly influencing judges

By John O’Brien | Legal NewslineThe Center Square WASHINGTON – The U.S. House Judiciary Committee is asking for answers from one of the lawyers pushing climate-change cases against Big Oil,...
Music teacher Larry DeWeese addressed the board on January 21st.

Community Urges Board to Reconsider Teacher Cuts

By Andrea Arens A little less than a dozen students, parents, and community members addressed the Peotone School Board this week, urging district leaders to reconsider the elimination of a...
Illinois Quick Hits: Higher ed board pushes for more spending

Illinois Quick Hits: Higher ed board pushes for more spending

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Board of Higher Education has approved a 4.5% spending increase in its budget for fiscal...
Will County Board Graphic.02

County Committee Proposes Federal Study on “Legacy Pollution” Near Joliet and Romeoville Refineries

Article Summary: In a draft lobbying platform presented to the Will County Board, the Legislative Committee outlined a request for a federal study to identify and mitigate health risks in...
ABA can’t end anti-white scholarship discrimination lawsuit

ABA can’t end anti-white scholarship discrimination lawsuit

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square The American Bar Association can't escape a lawsuit accusing the group, tasked with setting national ethical and professional standards for lawyers and...
Winter storm to cause widespread disruption, states of emergency

Winter storm to cause widespread disruption, states of emergency

By Andrew Rice and Ava OttThe Center Square A major winter storm is expected to bring significant snowfall and widespread disruption across the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast this week, according to...
AGs call on 'climate cartel' to uphold consumer protections

AGs call on ‘climate cartel’ to uphold consumer protections

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Six state attorneys general called on the nonprofit climate company Ceres, Inc. to halt all conduct they say is in violation of antitrust and consumer...
Pritzker says $481.6 million put in reserves, GOP questions state spending

Pritzker says $481.6 million put in reserves, GOP questions state spending

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – One day after an Illinois state representative said there was no budget transparency from J.B. Pritzker’s office,...
Last four government spending bills pass U.S. House

Last four government spending bills pass U.S. House

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The U.S. House finished the last of its fiscal year 2026 appropriations work Thursday with the passage of the last four government funding bills, sending...