There are no headlines when a restaurant cuts ten people or the local print shop cuts five. If fees fall at a doctor's office, the receptionist may have to leave.
By most estimates, small businesses, those with under 100 workers, employ 50% of the American workforce. While the announcements of banks and car companies cutting tens of thousand of employees make the front page, the economy may be hurting more by the declining revenue and credit crisis at firms no one has ever heard of.
According to Reuters, "Wall Street's pain is rippling through U.S. small businesses, as bankers who once pulled in million-dollar bonuses lose their jobs and cut back spending on everything from parties to home improvements."
This may point to the fact that the bailout is being aimed in the wrong direction. While $700 billion may help large financial firms and may even be used to save tens of thousands of people from home foreclosures, there is nothing concrete being done by the federal government to help the small business owner.
What could be done? For starters, The Small Business Administration, a federal agency, should be assigned some of the $700 billion Paulson package. Credit-worthy companies should have access to that in the form of loans. Doing this would require far more people than the SBA has, so it would need to be done through the banking system. Banks should be given financial incentives to lend money provided by the fund.
The government is overlooking one of the most critical parts of the economy. In doing so, it is almost certainly helping unemployment push above 7%.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-20-2008 @ 10:19AM
Sam said...
They should have immediately given the pirates what they wanted for the oil tanker. They have lost the amount of the ranson as a result of the drop in oil prices and will loose more daily!!!!
11-20-2008 @ 10:44AM
Virgil Bierschwale said...
Folks, bailouts do not and will not work because they do not target the problem.
You can give bailouts to large companies and to small companies, but if the American consumer, that accounts for 70 % of all purchases does not have any money, they cannot do business with the small business or the large business.
We absolutely have to stop putting the American consumer out of work immediately by offshoring their jobs or all of our retailers, manufacturers and raw material producers are going to be bankrupt and no amount of financial stimulus will stop that from happening.
Join me in putting the American consumer back to work, because they are the only ones that can save the American economy.
Virgil
http://www.KeepAmericaAtWork.com
11-20-2008 @ 10:49AM
Nava said...
I am with you 100% - and i am in the baby industry high end baby beding designer , our industrtry we all agree will stay long after many will go away yet we we see the less and less stores and we must lay off at least 50% of our workers. Yet i use all the ways i know to cut and just try to make the items that will end up in the baby's rooms
i am making a joke with my stores "you want a baby bedding set or someone to pick up the phone to be nice to you"? we can make the set but we have no one to talk to you...smiling
Nava of Nava's Designs