Robert Jay
Dilger
Senior
Specialist in American National Government
Small
business size standards are of congressional interest because the standards
determine eligibility for receiving Small Business Administration (SBA)
assistance as well as federal contracting and tax preferences. Although
there is bipartisan agreement that the nation’s small businesses play an
important role in the American economy, there are differences of opinion concerning
how to define them. The Small Business Act of 1953 (P.L. 83-163, as amended) authorized
the SBA to establish size standards for determining eligibility for federal
small business assistance. The SBA currently uses two size standards to
determine program eligibility: industry-specific size standards and an
alternative size standard based on the applicant’s maximum tangible net
worth and average net income after federal taxes.
The SBA’s industry-specific size standards determine program eligibility for
firms in 1,141 industrial classifications and 18 sub-industry activities
described in the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
The size standards are based on the following five measures: number of
employees; average annual receipts in the previous three years; asset size;
barrel per day refining capacity for petroleum refineries, or megawatt
hours for electrical power industries. Overall, the SBA currently
classifies about 97% of all employer firms as small. These firms represent
about 30% of industry receipts.
The SBA has always based its size standards on economic analysis of each
industry’s overall competitiveness and the competitiveness of firms within
each industry. However, in the absence of precise statutory guidance and
consensus on how to define small, the SBA’s size standards have often been
challenged, typically by industry representatives seeking to increase the
number of firms eligible for assistance and by Members concerned that the
size standards may not adequately target assistance to firms that they
consider to be truly small.
During the 111th Congress, P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010,
authorized the SBA to establish an alternative size standard using maximum
tangible net worth and average net income after federal taxes for both the
7(a) and 504/CDC loan guaranty programs. It also established, until the
SBA acted, an interim alternative size standard for the 7(a) and 504/CDC programs
of not more than $15 million in tangible net worth and not more than $5 million
in average net income after federal taxes (excluding any carry-over losses)
for the two full fiscal years before the date of the application. It also
required the SBA to conduct a detailed review of not less than one-third
of the SBA’s industry size standards every 18 months beginning on the date
of enactment (September 27, 2010).
This report provides a historical examination of the SBA’s size standards,
assesses competing views concerning how to define a small business, and
discusses how the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 might affect program
eligibility. It also discusses H.R. 585, the Small Business Size Standard
Flexibility Act of 2011, which would authorize the SBA’s Office of Chief
Counsel for Advocacy to approve or disapprove a size standard proposed by
a federal agency if it deviates from the SBA’s size standards. The SBA’s
Administrator currently has that authority. It also discusses H.R. 3987,
the Small Business Protection Act of 2012, which would require the SBA to make
available a justification when establishing or approving a size standard that
the size standard is appropriate for each individual industry
classification within a grouping of four-digit NAICS codes. The bill would
address the SBA’s announced intention to combine size standards within
industrial groups as a means to reduce the complexity of its size standards and
to provide greater consistency for industries that have similar economic
characteristics.
Date of Report: April 10, 2012
Number of Pages: 37
Order Number: R40860
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