Obama calls Congress for $30 billion support to small business lending fund
Touted last week in Obama’s State of the Union address, the plan is the latest incarnation of a proposal the president first floated in October. While credit conditions for large businesses have improved over the past year, small companies are still widely reporting problems finding the capital they need to fund their operations.
Since small businesses employ about half of American workers, policymakers worry that the ongoing credit crunch they face is contributing to the nation’s high rate of job losses. Improving the job market "must be our No. 1 focus in 2010," Obama said last week.
Lend more, pay less: The first draft of Obama’s plan, announced three months ago, involved lending TARP money to community banks to use for local business loans. But community bankers reacted warily to the plan -- they had little interest in taking capital from a program that has drawn so much criticism. TARP’s extensive regulatory requirements were also a turn-off.
Obama’s new proposal asks Congress to divert TARP funds into an entirely new lending program. The administration hopes that scrapping the TARP taint will make the offering more attractive to bankers.
The dividend rate for the capital would start at 5% and decrease by 1% for every 2.5% increase in small business lending the bank shows compared to a 2009 baseline. The dividend rate could drop as low as 1% for a community bank that increases its small business lending balance by 10%. That rate would stay frozen for five years, allowing the bank to pay the Treasury back gradually.
0:00 /2:53The state of one small business
Sparks fly on Capitol Hill: For the $30 billion program to take effect, Obama needs Congress to enact it.
However, the idea of tapping TARP funds has already hit stiff opposition.
President Obama pressed for bipartisan support during his town hall meeting in Nashua. "I can’t do this alone. Democrats can’t do this alone -- nor should we," he said. "We’ve got two parties in this country."
Steve Gordon, a small manufacturer from Clearwater, Fla., put Obama on the hot seat during a town hall meeting last week in Tampa.
"I appreciate the pledge of $30 billion to small businesses. But lending it to the banks to lend to us is not the answer," Gordon told the president. "You lent directly to the automakers, you lent directly to the banks -- why can’t the government make [loans] available directly to us?"
The Small Business Administration doesn’t have the staff or infrastructure for a lending program of that magnitude, Obama responded. The nation’s banks have to be part of the solution.
"I am absolutely sympathetic to what you’re saying because I’m hearing it everywhere I go," he said. "You’ve got a lot of small business owners who are ready to grow, ready to hire, but they just can’t get financing. So we’re going to use the SBA as one tool; this $30 billion is going to help."
While the banks helped cause an economic meltdown by lending too freely, now "the pendulum has shifted too far in the other direction," Obama said. "What we’re trying to do is to encourage [banks] to get that happy medium where they’re not taking such exorbitant risks that they threaten the entire system, but they’re also open to enough risk that America’s dynamic free enterprise system is actually able to work."
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