Why is Small Business the Chief Business of Congress?
Rutgers Law Journal, Vol. 43, p. 1, 2012
University of Pittsburgh Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2011-12
58 Pages Posted: 10 Apr 2011 Last revised: 27 Nov 2012
Date Written: February 7, 2011
Abstract
Small business is a sacred cow in America. In 1958, Congress created the Small Business Investment Company ("SBIC"), a unique public-private program that provides long-term capital to small entrepreneurs. From its inception, however, the SBIC has been plagued by inefficiency and failure. Yet, Congress continues to pour millions of dollars into the SBIC program, with no end in sight. What explains this failed policy course?
This article argues that the SBIC program exemplifies the pitfalls of legal and political institutional path dependency and should be replaced by private institutional lending systems. Pursuant to this account, past decisions can influence future legal developments even in the face of material social change.
Political institutions can entrench ineffective paths by sustaining dynamics of "increasing returns" through processes of "positive feedbacks" and "self-reinforcement." Increasing returns occur when the benefits of a choice augment simply because over time more people opt for that choice.
Our romantic ideal of small business as an economic and social catalyst has sprouted positive cultural feedbacks. Thereafter, the establishment of the House and Senate Small Business Committees and the Small Business Administration sustained this culture, self-reinforcing the SBIC program inefficient path where we remain invested to this day.
Keywords: small business, SBA, SBIC program, Small Business Investment Company, path dependency, positive feedback, political systems, business culture, private institutional lending, self-reinforcement, policy reform, tax reform, tax breaks, tax law, entrepreneurship, minority businesses, equity gap
JEL Classification: K34, K20, H25, H81
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation