Project 2025 Status
Chapter Author
President and CEO of the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council. Sits on several federal advisory boards representing entrepreneurs and small businesses.
Kerrigan echoes familiar conservative arguments for limiting government and reducing regulations. She adds detailed recommendations for effectively reducing regulations by using an expanded Office of Advocacy. Her call to remove or relax regulations that govern SBA and other taxpayer-funded loans to religious institutions is another example of the conservatives’ concerted effort to reduce separation between church and state.
Kerrigan also echoes conservative party claims of rampant fraud in the COVID-19 loan programs and calls for investigating Planned Parenthood based on loans to its affiliates. Kerrigan argues that this money should be returned, and proposes possible legal consequences.
Kerrigan notes the importance of the SBA, which helps small businesses (and thus jobs) survive in difficult times. Successful efforts include funneling money for disaster relief; she says that conservatives would also agree with the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which has been credited with saving millions of jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic. But Kerrigan also points to SBA programs that have wasted taxpayer money: for example, fraudulent applications for other forms of COVID-19 relief.
The SBA’s budget and priorities have fluctuated with each administration, but its core functions are: helping to finance small businesses; offering training; ensuring that small businesses get a certain percentage of government contracts; and advocating for small businesses’ concerns in the regulatory process. Reforms should focus on accountability, management, transparency, and strengthening the Office of Advocacy, which helps protect small businesses from over-regulation.
Proposed reforms:
Proposed reforms:
She then argues for more investment in domestic manufacturing companies, whose products help ensure supply chain availability and independence from foreign goods. To stay competitive with other countries, Kerrigan suggests that SBA should offer loans to medium-size businesses when there are no other places for them to find capital.
This restructuring of the SBA requires new personnel, and an SBA Administrator and leadership team who share and execute the president’s mission and policies effectively.