HR-832-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship.
Sponsored by Roger Williams (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would make three changes to the Small Business Administration's Office of Advocacy. First, it would expand the office's economic monitoring mandate to include the international economy, not just the domestic economy. Second, it would add a new formal duty requiring the office to represent small business interests before foreign governments and international entities on regulatory and trade matters. Third, it would correct two typographical errors in existing law ("complete" to "compete" and "serviced-disabled" to "service-disabled").
Who benefits
Small businesses that export goods or services, or that compete with foreign imports, would gain a formal advocate in international trade and regulatory forums. Small businesses owned by service-disabled veterans would benefit from the corrected statutory language clarifying their eligibility. Trade associations representing small exporters may gain a more active government partner in international negotiations.
Who is hurt
Larger businesses and industry groups that currently dominate international trade advocacy may face a more competitive voice for small business interests in those forums. Foreign governments and international bodies would face a new formal U.S. interlocutor on small business regulatory matters, which could complicate or slow some negotiations. There are no direct financial costs imposed on any private party by this bill.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that small businesses are increasingly affected by international trade rules and foreign regulations but have historically lacked a dedicated federal advocate in those arenas — a gap this bill would close. They contend that the SBA Office of Advocacy already performs this function domestically with measurable results, and that extending its mandate internationally is a logical, low-cost expansion that levels the playing field for the roughly 300,000 small U.S. businesses that export.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that international trade and diplomatic representation is the established domain of the U.S. Trade Representative and the State Department, and that adding the SBA Office of Advocacy to that space risks duplicating effort, creating conflicting U.S. positions, and complicating foreign negotiations. They contend that the bill provides no additional funding or staffing, raising questions about whether the office has the capacity or expertise to meaningfully represent small businesses before foreign governments and international bodies.