Contact:
Molly Brogan
202-552-2904
press@nsba.biz
Washington, D.C. — NSBA today released a new report, “Squandered Opportunities and Misplaced
Priorities: Why Small Business is Too Big to Fail” detailing some of Congress’
and the administration’s largest missed opportunities to fix some of the
biggest problems facing small businesses in the U.S. over the last few years. Though certainly not a new
phenomenon, this report highlights bills that just didn’t go far enough,
proposals that took a wrong turn altogether, and initiatives that left us
scratching our heads wondering, “What were they thinking?”
“There are more than 70
million people in the U.S. who work for, or run a small business – one-third of
the voting population in the U.S.,” stated NSBA President Todd McCracken. “Despite that
number, and the increased public profile of small business, not enough has been
done to actually help small businesses survive the economic downturn.”
Two years ago, NSBA launched
a campaign, Small Business: 70 Million
Strong…And Voting, to educate lawmakers, candidates and the public on the
importance of small business. Since then, the U.S. economy has hit rock bottom, spurring an
across-the-board recognition of the importance of small-business job creation.
Unfortunately, that recognition has too often spurred empty rhetoric which has
diverted our lawmakers from the real work that needs to be done.
The new NSBA report
succinctly lists some of most disappointing failures of Congress and the
administration, including: the absence of a long-term reauthorization of the Small
Business Innovation and Research (SBIR) Program; the refusal to explicitly protect
small-business credit cards; no action to fix the estate tax; and the list goes
on. Additionally, the report compares the cost of enacting these key priorities
to the cost of six other non-small-business initiatives ranging from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
to the Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) to the recently-enacted health care legislation. The difference is
staggering: pending small business initiatives: $358 billion; already-spent
funds on other non-small-business initiatives: $2.836 trillion—a mere 12.6
percent of the funds already spent on just six non-small-business bills.
“Despite our
very-well earned frustration at these many missteps, NSBA’s small-business
members still believe there is a way forward,” stated NSBA Chair Keith Ashmus
and co-founding partner at Frantz Ward, LLP in Cleveland, Ohio. “However, more can and must be done—small business
will no longer accept rhetoric in the place of action.”
Please click here to download the complete report.
Since 1937, NSBA has
advocated on behalf of America’s entrepreneurs. A staunchly nonpartisan
organization, NSBA reaches more than 150,000 small businesses nationwide and is
proud to be the nation’s first small-business advocacy organization. For more
information, please visit www.nsba.biz
###
