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Political Lies and Small Business

September 5, 2011 by Llewellyn King 3 Comments

Brace for a storm of platitudes, recycled myths, and just old-fashioned
political lies.

It will all start with President Obama when he addresses a joint session
of Congress on Thursday about the jobs deficit. Whatever he says will be
followed by scorn and abuse from the Republicans. All the hoary old claims
about the absence of leadership, wasteful spending, punitive regulation
and the need to cut taxes will be regurgitated.

The president will have a TelePrompTer full of enchantment tales. He also
will talk of cutting some taxes; maybe because he thinks this will endear
him to the undecided voters, or mollify some Republicans, or because he
consistently tries to make his way in a viciously partisan political world
by endeavoring to sound like the voice of detached reason. It will make no
friends and infuriate the Democratic core. It will be another betrayal to
them.

All of the tax ideas, presidential and Republican, will be wrapped in cant
about small business. Oh, do politicians love small business. Apple pie is
good, mom is noble but small business, and small business alone, can cause
the entire Congress of the United States to genuflect.

They love the travel agent with six employees with the same passion that
they adore General Electric. The machine tool repair and maintenance
contractor with 40 employees – he is the very embodiment of American
exceptionalism. The woman with a wholesale jewelry business that she
operates with her husband and grown daughter — they are the stuff of
American legend.

Nonsense.

If Congress knew anything about the small business world, it would
stop forcing the wrong medicine on the patient. Incorrect therapies won’t
help, no matter how vigorous the applications.

To the political establishment, small business is suffering because of
taxation and regulation. Fiddle with these twin bugaboos, the political
narrative goes, and small business will bloom like the bluebells in
spring.

Have any of these people ever talked to small business operators? Small
business has many problems, but taxation is seldom one of them. Do they
really think the garment manufacturers on New York’s 7th Avenue are on the
phone, schmoozing about the rate of corporate taxation? More likely they
are talking about why the banks won’t lend, even against collateral, to
heretofore good customers; why imports from all over Asia are laying waste
to their customer base; and why the traffic in the cross-town streets is
horrendous.

Like all small businessmen, they don’t agonize over the frustration of
having to meet OSHA and EPA standards — these are irritants. Instead,
they agonize over whether there will be enough money to meet payroll.
Taxes, if any, come once a year, but the payroll keeps the small
entrepreneur anxious all year. It is the ogre that visits every two weeks.

To many, government is the problem; but not in the way legislators think.
The problem is the growing shortage of federal and state funds. This
affects many small businesses like builders, excavators, asphalt-layers
and the service industries that owe their survival to small contracts:
social service providers, translators, software writers, and consultants
in just about everything.

If you cut budgets, you cut small business.

Then there is the “chaining” of America. Local diners, hardware stores,
pharmacies and other retailing are crushed, annihilated when the chains
move in. The chains are not inherently evil, but they are manifestly
merciless. Walmart is but one of the chains putting small business to the
sword.

If those who administer government want to know something about small
business, they should spend a weekend at a strip-mall bakery or any other
firm with less than 50 employees. The experience would radically adjust
the rhetoric. It’s too late for Thursday, but don’t believe what you hear.

–For the Hearst-New York Times Syndicate

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Filed Under: King's Commentaries Tagged With: Congress, President Obama, retail chains, small business, taxes, Walmart

Comments

  1. Joan Cassedy says

    September 5, 2011 at 10:41 am

    You've got it, Llewellyn. Small business is THE employer and THE job creator in the United States. Period. Have we heard anything from SBA in this debate? I haven't.

    Reply
  2. Deborah Waroff says

    September 5, 2011 at 6:43 pm

    Great. Loans, loans, loans. The biggest problem for small businesses and especially start-ups is cash flow. The demise of middle market banking and small business banking is a tragedy for small and moderate sized businesses. The SBA never was worth much, but they could always try harder. And who the heck is around to factor the receivables these days?
    That is, assuming there is business in the first place. Of course if the economy shrinks and demand shrinks small business strangles.

    Reply
  3. Gary says

    September 6, 2011 at 8:55 pm

    Small businesses are important, but (Joan) that was not Llew's point. In my experience as a worker, small businesses pay less than big corporations and are as quick to adjust their workforces (up or down). All businesses are important. But, the Tea Partiers won't allow the taxation and spending to provide for commercial borrowing. They'll hammer home the need for reduced spending and reduced taxation, which will save a small business less than the cost of an employee. Too many Americans think that the USA should be run like a business or like a household, but countries (and schools, too) are not businesses, and certainly are not families.

    Reply

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