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Article added or updated:
09/05/2011 |
THE U.S. SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (SBA ) -
1953-2003
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Since its founding on July 30, 1953, the U.S. Small Business
Administration has delivered about 20 million loans, loan guarantees,
contracts, counseling sessions and other forms of assistance to small
businesses .
The SBA was officially established in 1953, but its philosophy and
mission began to take shape years earlier in a number of predecessor
agencies, largely as a response to the pressures of the Great Depression
and World War II.
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The Reconstruction Finance
Corporation (RFC), created by President Herbert Hoover in 1932 to
alleviate the financial crisis of the Great Depression, was SBA's
grandparent. The RFC was basically a federal lending program for all
businesses hurt by the Depression, large and small. It was adopted as
the personal project of Hoover's successor, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, and was staffed by some of Roosevelt's most capable and
dedicated workers.
Concern for small businessintensified during World War II, when large
industries beefed up production to accommodate wartime defense contracts
and smaller businesses were left unable to compete. To help small
businessparticipate in war production and give them financial
viability, Congress created the Smaller War Plants Corporation (SWPC) in
1942. The SWPC provided direct loans to private entrepreneurs,
encouraged large financial institutions to make credit available to
small enterprises, and advocated small businessinterests to federal
procurement agencies and big businesses .
The SWPC was dissolved after the war, and its lending and contract
powers were handed over to the RFC. At this time, the Office of Small
Business (OSB) in the Department of Commerce also assumed some
responsibilities that would later become characteristic duties of the
SBA. Its services were primarily educational. Believing that a lack of
information and expertise was the main cause of small businessfailure,
the OSB produced brochures and conducted management counseling for
individual entrepreneurs.
Congress created another wartime organization to handle small business
concerns during the Korean War, this time called the Small Defense
Plants Administration (SDPA). Its functions were similar to those of the
SWPC, except that ultimate lending authority was retained by the RFC.
The SDPA certified small businesses to the RFC when it had determined
the businesses to be competent to perform the work of government
contracts.
By 1952, a move was on to abolish the RFC. To continue the important
functions of the earlier agencies, President Dwight Eisenhower proposed
creation of a new small businessagency -- the Small Business
Administration (SBA).
In the Small Business Act of July 30, 1953, Congress created the Small
Business Administration, whose function was to "aid, counsel, assist and
protect, insofar as is possible, the interests of small business
concerns." The charter also stipulated that the SBA would ensure small
businesses a "fair proportion" of government contracts and sales of
surplus property.
By 1954, SBA already was making direct businessloans and guaranteeing
bank loans to small businesses , as well as making loans to victims of
natural disasters, working to get government procurement contracts for
small businesses and helping businessowners with management and
technical assistance and businesstraining.
The Investment Company Act of 1958 established the Small Business
Investment Company (SBIC) Program, under which SBA licensed, regulated
and helped provide funds for privately owned and operated venture
capital investment firms. They specialized in providing long-term debt
and equity investments to high-risk small businesses . Its creation was
the result of a Federal Reserve study that discovered, in the simplest
terms, that small businesses could not get the credit they needed to
keep pace with technological advancement.
In 1964, SBA began to attack poverty through the Equal Opportunity Loan
(EOL) Program. The EOL Program relaxed the credit and collateral
requirements for applicants living below the poverty level in an effort
to encourage new businesses that had been unable to attract financial
backing, but were nevertheless sound commercial initiatives.
Over the past 47 years, SBA has grown in terms of total assistance
provided and its array of programs tailored to encourage small
enterprises in all areas. SBA's programs now include financial and
federal contract procurement assistance, management assistance, and
specialized outreach to women, minorities and armed forces veterans. The
SBA also provides loans to victims of natural disasters and specialized
advice and assistance in international trade.
Nearly 20 million small businesses have received direct or indirect help
from one or another of those SBA programs since 1953, as the agency has
become the government's most cost-effective instrument for economic
development. In fact, SBA's current businessloan portfolio of roughly
219,000 loans worth more than $45 billion makes it the largest single
financial backer of U.S. businesses in the nation.
Over the past 10 years, (FY 1991-2000), the SBA has helped almost
435,000 small businesses get more than $94.6 billion in loans, more than
in the entire history of the agency before 1991. No other lender in this
country – perhaps no other lender in the world – has been responsible
for as much small businessfinancing as the SBA has during that time.
Since 1958, SBA’s venture capital program has put more than $30 billion
into the hands of small businessowners to finance their growth.
Last year alone, the SBA backed more than $12.3 billion in loans to
small businesses . More than $1 billion was made available for disaster
loans and more than $40 billion in federal contracts were secured by
small businesses with SBA's help.
SBA continues to branch out to increase businessparticipation by women
and minorities along new avenues such as the minority small business
program, microloans and the publication of Spanish language
informational materials.
There are those who argue that big businesses , profiting from "economies
of scale," can produce far more efficiently than small businesses . But
small businessis where the innovations take place. Swifter, more
flexible and often more daring than big businesses , small firms produce
the items that line the shelves of America's museums, shops and homes.
They keep intact the heritage of ingenuity and enterprise and they help
keep the "American Dream" within the reach of millions of Americans.
Every step of the way, SBA is there to help them.
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