- (a) Aid, counsel, assistance, etc., to small business concerns
The essence of the American economic system of private enterprise is free
competition. Only through full and free competition can free markets, free entry into business, and opportunities for the expression and growth of personal initiative and individual judgment be assured. The preservation and expansion of such competition is basic not only to the economic well-being but to the security of this Nation. Such security and well-being cannot be realized unless the actual and potential capacity of small business is encouraged and developed. It is the declared policy of the Congress that the Government should aid, counsel, assist, and protect, insofar as is possible, the interests of small-business concerns in order to preserve free competitive enterprise, to insure that a fair proportion of the total purchases and contracts or subcontracts for property and services for the Government (including but not limited to contracts or subcontracts for maintenance, repair, and construction) be placed with small-business enterprises, to insure that a fair proportion of the total sales of Government property be made to such enterprises, and to maintain and strengthen the overall economy of the Nation.
- (b) Assistance to compete in international markets
- (1) It is the declared policy of the Congress that the Federal Government,
through the Small Business Administration, acting in cooperation with the Department of Commerce and other relevant State and Federal agencies, should aid and assist small businesses, as defined under this chapter, to increase their ability to compete in international markets by -
- (A) enhancing their ability to export;
- (B) facilitating technology transfers;
- (C) enhancing their ability to compete effectively and efficiently against
imports;
- (D) increasing the access of small businesses to long-term capital for the
purchase of new plant and equipment used in the production of goods and services involved in international trade;
- (E) disseminating information concerning State, Federal, and private programs
and initiatives to enhance the ability of small businesses to compete in international markets; and
- (F) ensuring that the interests of small businesses are adequately represented
in bilateral and multilateral trade negotiations.
- (2) The Congress recognizes that the Department of Commerce is the principal
Federal agency for trade development and export promotion and that the Department of Commerce and the Small Business Administration work together to advance joint interests. It is the purpose of this chapter to enhance, not alter, their respective roles.
- (c) Aid for agriculturally related industries; financial assistance
It is the declared policy of the Congress that the Government, through the
Small Business Administration, should aid and assist small business concerns which are engaged in the production of food and fiber, ranching, and raising of livestock, aquaculture, and all other farming and agricultural related industries; and the financial assistance programs authorized by this chapter are also to be used to assist such concerns.
- (d) Use of assistance programs to establish, preserve, and strengthen
small business concerns
- (1) The assistance programs authorized by sections 636(i) and 636(j) of this
title are to be utilized to assist in the establishment, preservation, and strengthening of small business concerns and improve the managerial skills employed in such enterprises, with special attention to small business concerns (1) located in urban or rural areas with high proportions of unemployed or low-income individuals; or (2) owned by low-income individuals; and to mobilize for these objectives private as well as public managerial skills and resources.
- (2)(A) With respect to the programs authorized by section 636(j) of this
title, the Congress finds -
- (B) It is therefore the purpose of the programs authorized by section 636(j)
of this title to -
- (i) foster business ownership and development by individuals in groups that
own and control little productive capital; and
- (ii) promote the competitive viability of such firms in the marketplace by
creating a small business and capital ownership development program to provide such available financial, technical, and management assistance as may be necessary.
- (e) Assistance to victims of floods, etc., and those displaced as result
of federally aided construction programs
Further, it is the declared policy of the Congress that the Government should
aid and assist victims of floods and other catastrophes, and small-business concerns which are displaced as a result of federally aided construction programs.
- (f) Findings; purpose
- (g) Assistance to disaster victims under disaster loan program
In administering the disaster loan program authorized by section 636 of this
title, to the maximum extent possible, the Administration shall provide assistance and counseling to disaster victims in filing applications, providing information relevant to loan processing, and in loan closing and prompt disbursement of loan proceeds and shall give the disaster program a high priority in allocating funds for administrative expenses.
- (h) Assistance to women owned business
- (1) With respect to the programs and activities authorized by this chapter,
the Congress finds that -
- (A) women owned business has become a major contributor to the American
economy by providing goods and services, revenues, and jobs;
- (B) over the past two decades there have been substantial gains in the social
and economic status of women as they have sought economic equality and independence;
- (C) despite such progress, women, as a group, are subjected to discrimination
in entrepreneurial endeavors due to their gender;
- (D) such discrimination takes many overt and subtle forms adversely impacting
the ability to raise or secure capital, to acquire managerial talents, and to capture market opportunities;
- (E) it is in the national interest to expeditiously remove discriminatory
barriers to the creation and development of small business concerns owned and controlled by women;
- (F) the removal of such barriers is essential to provide a fair opportunity
for full participation in the free enterprise system by women and to further increase the economic vitality of the Nation;
- (G) increased numbers of small business concerns owned and controlled by
women will directly benefit the United States Government by expanding the potential number of suppliers of goods and services to the Government; and
- (H) programs and activities designed to assist small business concerns owned
and controlled by women must be implemented in such a way as to remove such discriminatory barriers while not adversely affecting the rights of socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.
- (2) It is, therefore, the purpose of those programs and activities conducted
under the authority of this chapter that assist women entrepreneurs to -
- (A) vigorously promote the legitimate interests of small business concerns
owned and controlled by women;
- (B) remove, insofar as possible, the discriminatory barriers that are
encountered by women in accessing capital and other factors of production; and
- (C) require that the Government engage in a systematic and sustained effort
to identify, define and analyze those discriminatory barriers facing women and that such effort directly involve the participation of women business owners in the public/private sector partnership.
- (i) Prohibition on use of funds for individuals not lawfully within
United States
None of the funds made available pursuant to this chapter may be used to
provide any direct benefit or assistance to any individual in the United States if the Administrator or the official to which the funds are made available receives notification that the individual is not lawfully within the United States.