According to Lloyd Chapman, the hyperbolic president of the American Small Business League, legislation introduced by Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC) would close the Small Business Administration. Chapman actually stated on aย Fox Business News showย that Burrโs bill is โthe worst idea in the history of America.โ And here I thought it was Rick Santorumโs decision to run for president.
Unfortunately,ย Burrโs legislationย does not close the SBA. It merely combines the SBA, the Department of Commerce, and the Department of Labor into one bigger bureaucracy that would be known as the โDepartment of Commerce and the Workforce.โ In other words, it just rearranges the deck chairs. Title VI of the bill spells out what programs would be terminated (not much) and I donโt see any mention of the SBA.
Although I donโt consider Burrโs bill to be the worst idea in the history of America, Iโm not excited about it either. Not only would it not cut federal spending in any meaningful way (if at all), itโs an idea thatโs over a hundred years old. A Department of Commerce and Labor was created in 1903. In 1913, theย Department of Commercewas born when the Bureau of Labor was split off to form a newย Department of Labor.
The title of an anti-Burr billย pieceย recently penned by Chapman calls the SBA โthe Most Important Agency in Washington Today.โ Thatโs probably news to even the SBA. Chapman starts off by claiming that โRepublican members of Congress have once again drafted legislation aimed at ending all federal programs that assist small businesses.โ Huh?
Then thereโs this whopper:
To think about closing the only agency in the country that helps small businesses is unconscionable. Clearly Republicans like Senator Burr, his supporters and groups such as the CATO Institute are directed like puppets by the defense and aerospace industry.
Sorry, Lloyd. The essay onย terminating the SBAย that I recently coauthored with Veronique de Rugy was not written at the behest of the defense and aerospace industry. And I donโt think the defense and aerospace industry has been behind Catoโs work onย downsizing the Department of Defenseย either.
Whereas the essay I wrote with Veronique is primarily focused on why the SBAโs loan guarantee programs should be abolished, Chapman and his organization are primarily focused on making sure that small businesses get a certain percentage of government contracts. Chapman is correct that government contracting is fraught with fraud and abuse. In that regard, he says that the SBA needs to be cleaned up. But if the SBA has failed as an independent agency after all these years to please Chapman, why then would it be the end of the world to fold the SBA into a cabinet-level agency?
Iโm probably just wasting my time asking the question. After all, this is same Lloyd Chapman who caused a ruckus a few years ago because Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) had the audacity to invite Veronique to testify at a hearing on the SBA. In Lloydโs world, the de Rugy invite meant that Coburn wanted to abolish the SBA. Coburn is now in his second term and still hasnโt introduced legislation to abolish the SBA.
Iโm all for a serious discussion and debate on the SBA. The SBAโs loan guarantee programs benefit a relatively tiny number of small businesses at the expense of the vast majority of small businesses that do not receive government support. Moreover, the biggest winners from these loan guarantees are big banks who reap the profits but get to kick the bulk of any losses to the government. One would think a pro-small business/anti-big business guy like Chapman would be concerned by this. Instead, Chapman consistently resorts to wild exaggerations and conspiracy theories. As a result, I canโt take him seriously. Itโs too bad policymakers do.
Small Business Administration to Close?ย is a post fromย Cato @ Liberty – Cato Institute Blog
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