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U.S. Small Business Administration

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Small Business Administration
Administrator:Kelly Loeffler
Annual budget:$1 billion (2024)
Total employed:2,460 (2024)
Year created:1953
Official website:Office website



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TheSmall Business Administration (SBA) is a United States agency formed in 1953 "to aid, counsel, assist and protect the interests of small business concerns, to preserve free competitive enterprise and to maintain and strengthen the overall economy of our nation."

Kelly Loeffler is the administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration. PresidentDonald Trump (R) nominatedKelly Loeffler to serve as administrator of the SBA in his second presidential administration.Click here to read more about her confirmation process.

The SBA employed 2,460 people in 2024.[1][2]

On April 3, 2019, theU.S. Senate voted 51-48 in favor of a change to chamber precedent lowering the maximum time allowed for debate on executive nominees to posts below the Cabinet level and on nominees todistrict court judgeships from 30 hours after invokingcloture to two.[3]

The change was passed under a procedure, often referred to as thenuclear option, that requires 51 votes rather than 60.[4]

It was the third use of thenuclear option in Senate history. In 2013, it was used to eliminate the 60-vote threshold to confirm presidential nominees, except those to theSupreme Court. In 2017, it was used to eliminate the 60-vote threshold required to confirm Supreme Court nominees.[5] For more, seeFilibuster and reconciliation in the United States Congress.


HIGHLIGHTS
  • The Small Business Administration (SBA) is a government agency that provides assistance to small businesses and entrepreneurs via loans, loan guarantees, counseling, and other assistance programs.
  • The SBA is headed by the SBA Administrator, a cabinet-level position.
  • While the SBA does not directly lend money, it does guarantee portions of loans made by banks to small businesses against defaults.
  • History

    PresidentHerbert Hoover started the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) during the Great Depression as a lending program for businesses.Franklin D. Roosevelt expanded the RFC after World War II when the Smaller War Plants Corporation (SWPC) was dissolved and its power to award loans to small companies in order to acquire government defense contracts was given to the RFC. After a similar agency to the SWCP was dissolved following the Korean War, there was a push to abolish the RFC. At that point, PresidentDwight Eisenhower (R) proposed the creation of the Small Business Administration to advise and provide loans to small businesses.Congress signed the Small Business Act into law in 1953 forming the SBA. By 1954, the SBA began making loans to small businesses. In 1958, the Small Business Investment Company Program (SBIC) was formed in order to provide investments and equity to high-risk small businesses. The Equal Opportunity Loan Program (EOL) was formed in 1964, easing regulations on credit and collateral for business loans made to those below the poverty line.[6]

    Mission

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    The official SBA mission statement is as follows:

    The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) helps Americans start, grow, and build resilient businesses.


    SBA was created in 1953 as an independent agency of the federal government to aid, counsel, assist and protect the interests of small business concerns; preserve free competitive enterprise; and maintain and strengthen the overall economy of our nation. SBA reviews Congressional legislation and testifies on behalf of small businesses. It assesses the impact of regulatory burden on small businesses.[7]

    SBA.gov[1]

    Leadership

    The administrator of the Small Business Administration is responsible for overseeing the programs that assist small businesses in obtaining loans and loan guarantees, as well as contracts, counseling sessions, and other forms of assistance.[8]

    In January 2012, PresidentObama elevated the administrator of the SBA to a Cabinet-level position in his administration.[9]

    Administrators of the Small Business Administration Full History
    SBA AdministratorYears in officeNominated byConfirmation vote
    William D. Mitchell1953Dwight D. Eisenhower
    Wendell B. Barnes1954-1959Dwight D. Eisenhower
    Philip McCallum1959-1961Dwight D. Eisenhower
    John E. Horne1961-1963John F. Kennedy
    Eugene F. Foley1963-1965John F. Kennedy
    Bernard L. Boutin1966-1967Lyndon B. Johnson
    Robert C. Moot1967-1968Lyndon B. Johnson
    Howard J. Samuels1968-1969Lyndon B. Johnson
    Hilary J. Sandoval, Jr.1969-1971Richard Nixon
    Thomas S. Kleppe1971-1975Richard Nixon
    Mitchell P. Kobelinski1976-1977Gerald Ford
    A. Vernon Weaver1977-1981Jimmy Carter
    Michael Cardenas1981-1982Ronald Reagan
    James C. Sanders1982-1986Ronald Reagan
    James Abdnor1987-1989Ronald Reagan
    Susan Engeleiter1989-1991George H.W. Bush
    Pat Saiki1991-1993George H.W. Bush
    Erskine Bowles1993-1994Bill Clinton
    Philip Lader1994-1997Bill Clinton
    Aida Alvarez1997-2001Bill Clinton
    Hector Barreto2001-2006George W. Bush
    Steve Preston2006-2008George W. Bush
    Karen Mills2009-2013Barack Obama
    Maria Contreras-Sweet2014-2017Barack ObamaVoice vote
    Linda McMahon2017-2019Donald Trump81-19
    Jovita Carranza2020-2021Donald Trump88-5
    Isabella Casillas Guzman2021-2025Joe Biden81-17
    Everett Woodel (acting)2025-2025Donald Trump-
    Kelly Loeffler2025-presentDonald Trump52-46

    Note: Missing votes will be filled in as they are researched.

    Organization

    The SBA is headed by the SBA Administrator, a cabinet-level position. In addition, there are various regional offices. The table below details regional offices and the areas they cover.[10][11]

    SBA Regional Offices, February 2024
    RegionOfficeTerritory covered
    Region ISBA New EnglandConnecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
    Region IISBA AtlanticNew York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, The U.S. Virgin Islands
    Region IIISBA Mid-AtlanticDelaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington, DC, West Virginia
    Region IVSBA SoutheastAlabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
    Region VSBA Great LakesIllinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin
    Region VISBA South CentralArkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas
    Region VIISBA Great PlainsIowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska
    Region VIIISBA Rocky MountainsColorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming
    Region IXSBA PacificArizona, California, Guam, Hawaii, Nevada
    Region XSBA Pacific NorthwestAlaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington
    Source:Small Business Administration

    Budget

    Biden administration

    Small Business Administration Annual Budget
    YearBudget (in billions)% Difference from previous year
    2024$1.0−16.67%
    2023$1.233.33%
    2022$0.90%
    2021$0.9N/A

    Trump Administration

    Small Business Administration Annual Budget
    YearBudget (in billions)% Difference from previous year
    2020$764.524,561.29%
    2019$3.1244.44%
    2018$0.90%
    2017$0.9N/A

    Obama administration

    Small Business Administration Annual Budget
    YearBudget (in billions)% Difference from previous year
    2016$0.90%
    2015$0.912.5%
    2014$0.8−20%
    2013$1.011.11%
    2012$0.928.57%
    2011$0.7−12.5%
    2010$0.833.33%
    2009$0.6N/A

    Authority and responsibilities


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    The SBA operates several lending programs for small businesses. While the SBA does not directly lend money, it does guarantee portions of loans made by banks to small businesses against defaults. According to the SBA, "SBA loan guaranty requirements and practices can change as the government alters its fiscal policy and priorities to meet current economic conditions. Therefore, you can’t rely on past policy when seeking assistance in today's market."[12]


    The SBA's lending programs also include low-interest disaster loans intended to be used to rebuild or repair damaged property, micro-loans from nonprofit micro-loan financial intermediaries up to $50,000, and the 7(a) Loan Guarantee Program, which is designed to make capital available through bank and non-bank lending institutions. In 2010, the passage of the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 increased the maximum amounts of these loans to $10 million.[12]

    According to the SBA, the administration works with federal agencies to award at least 23 percent of all prime government contract dollars to small businesses. The SBA offers counseling and workshops to small businesses.[13]

    The SBA also administers theRegulatory Flexibility Act and theSmall Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act.

    Recent news

    The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the termsSmall Business Administration. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

    See also

    External links

    Footnotes

    1. 1.01.1SBA.gov, "Organization," accessed February 27, 2024
    2. BestPlacestoWork.org, "Small Business Administration," accessed February 27, 2024
    3. The Hill, "GOP triggers 'nuclear option' to speed up Trump picks," April 3, 2019
    4. Axios, "Senate GOP invokes 'nuclear option' to speed up confirmations of Trump nominees," April 3, 2019
    5. NBC News, "McConnell to use 'nuclear option' to confirm lower-level nominees," April 2, 2019
    6. SBA.gov, "Our History," accessed March 24, 2014
    7. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
    8. SBA.gov, "What We Do," accessed April 3, 2017
    9. Wall Street Journal, "Obama to elevate SBA chief," January 13, 2013
    10. Small Business Administration, "SBA Administrator," accessed January 29, 2017
    11. Small Business Administration, "SBA Leadership," accessed February 27, 2024
    12. 12.012.1Small Business Administration, "What SBA Offers to Help Small Businesses Grow," accessed January 29, 2017
    13. Small Business Administration, "SBA's Role in Government Contracting," accessed January 29, 2017
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