RE: America First - A Budget Blueprint to Make America Great Again

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America First - A Budget Blueprint to Make America Great Again

in politics •  7 years ago  (edited)

Looking at their site I found a couple of documents that might help answer that question. First I noticed this on their "About Page"

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That led me to these two performance documents. I would think if the government was pro small american business, they would make sure more than a "goal" of 23% of their "prime" contracts were awarded to small american business...

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U.S. SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Summary of Performance & Financial Information
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/aboutsbaarticle/SBA_Summary_of_Performance_and_Financial_Information_508C.PDF

Fiscal Year 2016 Total SBA Loan Approvals and - Federal Contracts Awarded by State https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/aboutsbaarticle/FY_2016_Data_508C_V3.pdf

The next step would be to address it at the state level and ask them if they are truly an advocate for small business or just a portal for banks to funnel accounts into. My answer, they have their uses, but it's nothing you can't learn with a pell grant at your local community college. Too many "guardrails" on federal and state money slow growth. From what I can tell they are there to help you navigate through all their red tape.

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Thanks for the reply, this is really interesting. Please help me understand your idea here.

Your thought is that regardless of the pie, a larger share of funds should go to directly financing small businesses, with emphasis on this financing not simply serving as a clearinghouse for bank dealings?

This seems to make a lot of sense to me. Any idea what might be some of the drawbacks? THANKS!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

I can't really think of any drawbacks. Everyone is pretty literate these days and most forms are online with instructions.
https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/learn-grants.html

and believe the whole thing could be replaced with crowdfunding, VC's getting involved in local community and a simple hotline help-desk.

Pushback by the banks and by lobbying legislation. Also, finding out who is getting the 98% of prime government contracts and redirecting that. Doubt that list exists.
http://gtpac.org/2012/11/16/big-firms-edge-out-small-businesses-for-billions-in-awards/
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Oh Wait! Here you go. It's from 2011 but doubt it's changed much.
http://pogoblog.typepad.com/pogo/2011/06/take-it-from-the-top-ten-contracting-behemoths-pull-in-25-percent-of-all-federal-contracts.html

Thanks for digging that up! You gave me a lot to consider that will definitely shade my thinking going forward. Cheers!

Wow Thank You! These are the questions we need to ask and I don't trust 21 year old interns to do the reading for the bi-focal class of 2017.