Where’s the help for small businesses?
Well, I took a few days off, but the country’s economic implosion didn’t. In my post-holiday look at the news, I’ve found that some other people are upset about the same thing that’s been infuriating me: Though the U.S. depends heavily on the jobs and commerce generated by small businesses, small-business entrepreneurs and owners get next-to-no help from anyone with money – not governments, not venture capitalists, not business-development organizations – not even in this age of bailouts.
As Simona Covel of the Wall Street Journal wrote Friday:
”For many small businesses across the country, these are scary times. The dramatic pullback in consumer spending is only the latest blow threatening to push some strapped small businesses out of existence. Customers are paying their bills late, cutting off cash flow, the lifeblood of a small business. Even healthy companies are being choked by the lack of credit lines and bank loans. Others are still reeling from several years of high raw-materials prices.
“In a recent survey from the National Federation of Independent Business, more than a quarter of small business owners said the current economic downturn is threatening their ability to survive. Nearly half of respondents said slow or lost sales are their most immediate problem.
“In the months ahead, ‘we are going to see small businesses that were marginal go out of business,’ says William Dunkelberg, NFIB’s chief economist. ‘We’ve never seen sales trends as weak.’
“Small businesses are a driver of the U.S. economy. In the past decade, small businesses — those with fewer than 500 employees — have created 60% to 80% of the nation’s net new jobs each year, according to the Small Business Administration. More than half of Americans are employed by a small business, and these companies are responsible for more than half of the nation’s nonfarm private gross domestic product.”
I have to ask: Does it make sense to anybody that even in better economic times, community and state business resources go almost exclusively to luring and nurturing big technology ventures? And that since times have gotten really bad, all the help is going to the giant corporations that messed things up in the first pace?
Where are the investments in the diversified array of smaller companies that every economy needs? Haven’t we learned anything from all the factory towns that have collapsed because the one big employer pulled out or went bankrupt? Why are our government development efforts and venture foundations and angel investors putting all their eggs in the tech-manufacturing basket? Even the greenest portfolio manager would recognize that as a dumb move.
Maybe it’s time we small-business owners demanded smarter and fairer investment strategies from our cities, states and nation.
As Covel’s story notes, ”Many are frustrated that Washington is bailing out some of the largest companies and banks. ‘Our members are angry that the federal government is giving taxpayer money to big companies that have been horribly irresponsible while small businesses are not getting the money they need to keep their doors open,’ Margot Dorfman, chief executive of the U.S. Women’s Chamber of Commerce, told the House Small Business Committee earlier this year. The government should set aside money specifically to assist small businesses, she said.”
The small-business community needs to speak up now – and not just owners, but anyone who works for or buys from a small business. We all need to remind our mayors and council members and state representatives and governors as well as our national leaders that small businesses are a big part of our nation’s economic survival and future.
Imagine how many small businesses and jobs that $150 billion AIG bailout would have supported. Now pick up the phone and call your elected leaders.
