S-1555-119
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship. Hearings held.
Sponsored by Joni Ernst (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would create a new legal definition of "small manufacturer" — a small business in manufacturing sectors (NAICS codes 31–33) with all production facilities located in the United States. It would then roughly double the SBA loan limits available to these businesses under the 7(a) loan program (from $3.75M to $7.5M for standard loans, and from $4.5M to $9M for export-linked loans) and raise the SBA 504 loan cap from $5.5M to $10M. It would also require the SBA Inspector General to assess default risk within two years, and require the SBA Administrator to submit annual job creation reports to Congress for five years.
Who benefits
Small U.S.-based manufacturers in need of capital above current SBA loan ceilings — particularly those in capital-intensive industries like metal fabrication, food processing, plastics, and industrial equipment. Lenders (banks and credit unions) that participate in SBA programs, who would be able to offer larger guaranteed loans. Workers at small manufacturers that secure financing for expansion or equipment upgrades. Rural and small-town communities where small manufacturers are often major employers. Domestic supply chain partners who may see increased orders from better-capitalized small manufacturers.
Who is hurt
Small manufacturers with production facilities outside the U.S. (even partially) who would be ineligible for the higher limits. Larger manufacturers that compete with small manufacturers and may face a more competitive landscape if small rivals gain better access to capital. Taxpayers who bear residual risk if default rates rise, since SBA loan guarantees are backed by the federal government. Non-manufacturing small businesses, which would not receive comparable loan limit increases and may face relatively less favorable treatment. Private lenders offering non-SBA financing who may lose business to the expanded program.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that small manufacturers are uniquely capital-intensive — purchasing equipment, facilities, and inventory requires far more upfront investment than service businesses — and that the current SBA loan ceilings have not kept pace with inflation or modern manufacturing costs. They contend that doubling loan limits for businesses that keep all production in the United States directly incentivizes domestic manufacturing, supports job retention, and strengthens supply chains that proved vulnerable during recent global disruptions. The bill's built-in oversight mechanisms — an Inspector General risk assessment and five years of annual job-creation reports — demonstrate fiscal responsibility and allow Congress to monitor outcomes before making changes permanent.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that raising loan guaranty ceilings exposes federal taxpayers to significantly larger losses per default, and that the SBA 7(a) program has already faced scrutiny for elevated default rates on larger loans — a risk the bill's own Inspector General review implicitly acknowledges. They contend that the "all production facilities in the United States" requirement creates an arbitrary eligibility cliff that excludes small businesses with even minor overseas operations, while doing nothing to address underlying barriers like workforce shortages or regulatory costs that constrain small manufacturers. Critics also argue that the bill's job-creation reporting requirement lacks enforcement teeth, meaning Congress may receive data showing poor outcomes without any automatic corrective mechanism.