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Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues

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Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Robert Jay Dilger Senior Specialist in American National Government January 3, 2014February 2, 2015 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R40860 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Summary Small business size standards are of congressional interest because the standards determine eligibility for receiving Small Business Administration (SBA) assistance as well as federal contracting and tax preferences. Although there is bipartisan agreement that the nation’s small businesses play an important role in the American economy, there are differences of opinion concerning how to define them. The Small Business Act of 1953 (P.L. 83-163, as amended) authorized the SBA to establish size standards for determining eligibility for federal small business assistance. The SBA currently uses two types of size standards to determine SBA program eligibility: industry-specific size standards and alternative size standards based on the applicant’s maximum tangible net worth and average net income after federal taxes. The SBA’s industry-specific size standards determine program eligibility for firms in 1,047 industrial classifications in 18 sub-industry activities described in the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The size standards are based on one of the following four measures: four measures: (1) number of employees, (2) average annual receipts in the previous three years, average asset (3) average asset size as reported in the firm’s four quarterly financial statements for the preceding year, or (4) a combination of number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity. Overall, the SBA currently classifies about 97% of all employer firms as small. These firms represent about 30% of industry receipts. The SBA has always based its size standards on economic analysis of each industry’s overall competitiveness and the competitiveness of firms within each industry. However, in the absence of precise statutory guidance and consensus on how to define small, the SBA’s size standards have often been challenged, typically by industry representatives seeking to increase the number of firms eligible for assistance and by Members concerned that the size standards may not adequately target assistance to firms that they consider to be truly small. During the 111th Congress, P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, authorized the SBA to establish an alternative size standard using maximum tangible net worth and average net income after federal taxes for both the 7(a) and 504/CDC loan guaranty programs. It also established, until the SBA acted, an interim alternative size standard for the 7(a) and 504/CDC programs of not more than $15 million in tangible net worth and not more than $5 million in average net income after federal taxes (excluding any carry-over losses) for the two full fiscal years before the date of the application. It also required the SBA to conduct a detailed review of not not less than one-third of the SBA’s industry size standards every 18 months. This report provides a historical examination of the SBA’s size standards, and assesses competing views concerning how to define a small business. It also discusses H.R. 585527, the Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, which would have authorizedRegulatory Flexibility Improvements Act of 2015, which would authorize the SBA’s Office of Chief Chief Counsel for Advocacy to approve or disapprove a size standard proposedrequested by a federal agency if it deviates from the SBA’s size standards agency for purposes other than the Small Business Act or the Small Business Investment Act of 1958. The SBA’s Administrator currently has that authority. It This report also discusses P.L. 112-239112239, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, which requires the SBA to make available a justification when establishing or approving a size standard that the size standard is appropriate for each individual industry classification. It addresses the SBA’s recent practice of combining size standards within industrial groups as a means to reduce the complexity of its size standards and to provide greater consistency for industrial classifications that have similar economic characteristics. Congressional Research Service Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Contents What Is a Small Business? ............................................................................................................... 1 How Big Is Small? ........................................................................................................................... 3 Who Makes the Call?....................................................................................................................... 45 Early Definitions of Small Business Vary in Approach and Criteria ............................................... 5 The Small Business Act of 1953’s Definition of Small Provides Room for Interpretation ............. 78 Industry Challenges the SBA’s Initial Size Standards, Claiming They Are Too Restrictive ........... 89 GAO and Several Members of Congress Challenge the SBA’s Size Standards, Claiming They Are Too Broad ................................................................................................................... 1011 SBA Proposes More Restrictive Size Standards Based on Industry Competitiveness .................. 1213 SBA Proposes to Streamline its Size Standards ............................................................................. 1617 SBA Adopts a More Incremental, Targeted Approach ................................................................... 1819 Congress Requires Periodic Size Standard Reviews ..................................................................... 2224 SBA’s Definitions for Small Business ........................................................................................... 2729 Alternative Size Standards....................................................................................................... 2830 Industry Size Standards ........................................................................................................... 2931 Other Federal Agency Size Standards ..................................................................................... 3335 Congressional Policy Options ........................................................................................................ 3537 Tables Table 1. Number of Employer Firms, Employer Firm Employment, and Employer Firm Annual Payroll, by Employer Firm Employment Size, 20112012 ....................................................... 34 Table 2. Industry-Based Size Standard Levels Currently Size Standards Being Applied During the SBA’s On-going Ongoing Review of its Small Business Size Standards ................................................................................................... 22 20 Table 3. Status of SBA Size Standard Reviews, 2010-20132014 .......................................................... 2425 Contacts Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 3739 Congressional Research Service Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues What Is a Small Business? There is bipartisan agreement that small businesses play an important role in the American economy.1 However, there are differences of opinion concerning how to define them. This issue is of congressional interest because the definition used determines business eligibility for Small Business Administration (SBA) assistance as well as federal contracting and tax preferences. The Small Business Act of 1953 (P.L. 83-163, as amended) authorized the SBA and justified the agency’s existence on the grounds that small businesses are essential to the maintenance of the free enterprise system.2 In economic terms, the congressional intent was to use the SBA to deter the formation of monopolies and the market failures monopolies cause by eliminating competition in the marketplace. The Small Business Act of 1953 provides the SBA authority to establish size standards for determining eligibility for federal small business assistance. The SBA currently uses two types of size standards to determine SBA program eligibility: (1) industry-specific size standards and (2) alternative size standards based on the applicant’s maximum tangible net worth and average net income after federal taxes. The SBA’s industry-specific size standards are also used to determine eligibility for federal small business contracting purposes. The SBA’s industry-specific size standards determine program eligibility for firms in 1,047 industrial classifications (hereinafter industries) in 18 sub-industry activities described in the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Given its mandate to promote competition in the marketplace, the SBA has based its size standards on an economic analysis of each industry’s overall competitiveness and the competitiveness of firms within the industry.3 The size standards are based on the following four measures: (1) number of employees, average annual receipts (2) average annual receipts in the previous three years, (3) average asset size as reported in the firm’s four quarterly financial financial statements for the preceding year, or (4) a combination of number of employees and barrel per per day refining capacity. Overall, the SBA currently classifies about 97% of all employer firms as as small.4 These firms represent about 30% of industry receipts. As will be discussed, the SBA began a comprehensive size standards review in 2008. At that time, the SBA used 41 different size standards: number of employees (7 size standards), average annual 1 1 Senate Democratic Policy Committee, “Senate Democrats Are Committed to America’s Small Businesses,” Washington, DC: Senate Democratic Policy Committee, May 18, 2009, at http://sbc.senate.gov/ DPC_small_biz_doc.pdf; Senate Republican Policy Committee, “Taxing Success: President Obama’s Tax Increases on Small Businesses are Bad for Job Creation,” Washington, DC: Senate Republican Policy Committee, March 17, 2009, at http://rpc.senate.gov/public/_files/031709TaxingSuccess.pdf; and President Barack Obama, “Remarks by the President to Small Business Owners, Community Lenders and Members of Congress,” press release, Office of the Press Secretary, March 16, 2009, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Remarks-by-the-President-to-smallbusiness-owners/. For further analysis of the role of small businesses in job creation, see CRS Report R41392, Small Business and the Expiration of the 2001 Tax Rate Reductions: Economic Issues, by Jane G. Gravelle and Sean Lowry. 2 P.L. 83-163, the Small Business Act of 1953, §202. 3 U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 1, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/ size_standards_methodology.pdf. 4 U.S. Small Business AdministrationSBA, “SBA’s Size Standards Analysis: An Overview on Methodology and Comprehensive Size Standards Review,” power point presentation, Khem R. Sharma, SBA Office of Size Standards, July 13, 2011, p. 4, at http://www.actgov.org/sigcom/SIGs/SIGs/SBSIG/Documents/2011%20-%20Documents%20and%20Presentations/ Size%20Stds%20Presentation_SIG%20Meeting.pdf. Congressional Research Service 1 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues receipts in the previous three years (31 size standards), average assets (1 size standard), annual megawatt hours of electric output in the preceding fiscal year (1 size standard), and a combination of number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity (1 size standard). It also had 11 other size standards for its financial and other programs. Since 2008, the SBA has used eight receipt-based size standards and eight employee-based size standards when establishing new, or reviewing existing, size standards. The SBA has argued that reducing the number of receipt-based size standards, from 31 to 8, will simplify the management and use of size standards and provide “greater consistency in size standards among industries that are similar in their economic characteristics.”5 As will be discussed, the SBA began a comprehensive size standards review in 2008. At that time, the SBA used 41 different size standards: 7 employee based size standards, 31 receipts based size standards (based on average annual receipts over the previous three years), 1 asset based size standard, 1 megawatt hours size standard (based on electrical output over the preceding fiscal year), and 1 size standard based on a combination of the number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity. The SBA also had 11 other size standards for its financial and assistance programs. From April 2009 through September 2014, the SBA applied eight receipts based size standards and eight employee based size standards when establishing new, or reviewing existing, size standards. The SBA argued that reducing the number of receipts based size standards from 31 to 8 would simplify the management and use of size standards and provide “greater consistency in size standards among industries that are similar in their economic characteristics.”5 Because SBA size standards remain in force until after they are reviewed, the number of SBA size standards did not immediately drop from 41 to 8 in 2009. Instead, the number of size standards began to decline gradually as new size standard final rules were issued. As of February 2, 2015, there were 28 SBA industry size standards in effect (17 receipts based size standards, 9 employee based sized standards, 1 asset based size standard, and 1 size standard based on a combination of the number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity). That number typically declines each time a new small business size standard final rule is issued.6 On September 10, 2014, the SBA applied a new employee based size standard (1,250 or fewer employees) and the 1,500 employee based size standard, which the SBA had stopped using in April 2009 when establishing new or reviewing existing size standards, in its proposed size standard rule for the Manufacturing sector (NAICS Sector 31-33). The new 1,250 or fewer employee based size standard will go into effect if it is included in the final rule for the Manufacturing sector, which is expected to be issued in 2015.7 In the absence of precise statutory guidance and consensus on how to define small, the SBA’s size standards have often been challenged, typically by industry representatives seeking to increase the number of firms eligible for assistance. The size standards have also been challenged by Members of Congress concerned that the size standards may not adequately target federal assistance to firms that they consider to be truly small. During the 111th Congress, P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, authorized the SBA to establish an alternative size standard using maximum tangible net worth and average net income after federal taxes for both the 7(a) and 504/CDC loan guaranty programs. It also established, until the SBA acted, an interim alternative size standard for the 7(a) and 504/CDC programs of not more than $15 million in tangible net worth and not more than $5 million in average net income after federal taxes (excluding any carry-over losses) for the two full fiscal years before the date of the application.6 It also8 The bill required the SBA to conduct a detailed review of 5 SBA, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 22, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 6 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards for Manufacturing,” 79 Federal Register 54150, September 10, 2014 7 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Industries With Employee Based Size Standards Not Part of Manufacturing, Wholesale Trade, or Retail Trade,” 79 Federal Register 53647, September 10, 2014. 8 On December 20, 2010, the SBA announced that it planned to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning the (continued...) Congressional Research Service 2 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues of not less than one-third of the SBA’s industry size standards every 18 months beginning on the date of enactment of the new law (September 27, 2010). This report provides a historical examination of the SBA’s size standards and assesses competing views concerning how to define a small business. It also discusses H.R. 585527, the Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, which would have authorizedRegulatory Flexibility Improvements Act of 2015, which would authorize the SBA’s Office of Chief Chief Counsel for Advocacy to approve or disapprove a size standard proposed by a federal agency if it deviates from the SBA’s size standardsrequested by a federal agency for purposes other than the Small Business Act or the Small Business Investment Act of 1958. The SBA’s Administrator currently has that authority. Under current practice, the SBA’s Administrator, through the SBA’s Office of Size Standards, consults with the SBA’s Office of Advocacy prior to making a final decision on such requests. This report also discusses P.L. 112-239, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, which became law on January 2, 2013. It requires the SBA when establishing or approving a size standard to make available a justification that the size standard is appropriate for each individual industry classification within a grouping of four-digit NAICS codes. It addresses the 5 U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 22, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 6 On December 20, 2010, the SBA announced that it planned to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning theSBA’s recent practice of combining size standards within industrial groups to provide greater consistency for industries that have similar economic characteristics.9 How Big Is Small? In 2012, there were an estimated 28.4 million businesses in the United States, including about 5.7 million employer firms and 22.7 million nonemployer firms.10 Nonemployer firms have no paid employees, annual business receipts of $1,000 or more ($1 or more in the construction industries), and are subject to federal income tax.11 Most nonemployers are self-employed individuals operating very small unincorporated businesses, which may or may not be the owner’s principal source of income. These firms are excluded from most business statistics.12 As Table 1 indicates, in 2012 (the latest available data) there were 5,726,160 employer firms in the United States employing 115,938,468 people and providing total payroll of $5.41 trillion. (...continued) new alternative size standard in February 2011. It did not do so. On January 8, 2013, the SBA announced that it would issue an interim final rule, to be effective when published, establishing an alternative size standard for the 7(a) and 504/CDC programs by October 2013. See U.S. Small Business AdministrationSBA, “Small Business Jobs Act: Small Business Size Standards; Alternative Size Standard for 7(a) and 504 Business Loan Programs,” 75 Federal Register 79868, December 20, 2010 and U.S. Small Business Administration, SBA, “Small Business Jobs Act: Small Business Size Standards; Alternative Size Standard for 7(a) and 504 Business Loan Programs,” 78 Federal Register 1638, January 8, 2013. The SBA also indicated in its notice of proposed rulemaking on January 8, 2013, that “the amendments will increase the current alternative standard for applicants for 504 loans.” Congressional Research Service 2 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues SBA’s recent practice of combining size standards within industrial groups to provide greater consistency for industries that have similar economic characteristics.7 How Big Is Small? There were an estimated 28.2 million businesses in the United States in 2011, including about 5.7 million employer firms and 22.5 million nonemployer firms.8 Nonemployer firms have no paid employees, annual business receipts of $1,000 or more ($1 or more in the construction industries), and are subject to federal income tax.9 Most nonemployers are self-employed individuals operating very small unincorporated businesses, which may or may not be the owner’s principal source of income. These firms are excluded from most business statistics.10 As Table 1 indicates, in 2011 (the latest available data) there were 5,684,424 employer firms in the United States employing 113,425,965 people and providing total payroll of $5.16 trillion increase the current alternative standard for applicants for 504 loans.” 9 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional, Scientific and Technical Services,” 76 Federal Register 14327, March 16, 2011. 10 U.S. Census Bureau, “Statistics of U.S. Businesses: U.S. & States, totals,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/susb/ index.html; and U.S. Census Bureau, “Nonemployer Statistics,” at http://censtats.census.gov/cgi-bin/nonemployer/ nonsect.pl. 11 U.S. Census Bureau, “Nonemployer Statistics: Definitions,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/nonemployer/ definitions.htm. 12 U.S. Census Bureau, “Nonemployer Statistics,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/nonemployer/index.html. Nonemployer firms account for less than 4% of business annual sales or receipts. Congressional Research Service 3 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Most employer firms (61.9%) had 4 or fewer employees, 89.6% had fewer than 20 employees, 98.2% had fewer than 100 employees, and 99.7% had fewer than 500 employees in 2012. The table also provides data concerning three possible economic factors that might be used to define a small business: an employer firm’s number of employees as a share (cumulative percentage) of the total number of employer firms, as a share of employer firm total employment, and as a share of employer firm total annual payroll. Table 1. Number of Employer Firms, Employer Firm Employment, and Employer Firm Annual Payroll, by Employer Firm Employment Size, 20112012 Number of Employees Number of Employer Firms Cumulative Percentage of Total Number of Employer Firms Employment Cumulative Percentage of Employer Firm Total Employment Employer Firm Annual Payroll ($1,000) Cumulative Percentage of Employer Firm Total Annual Payroll 0-4a 3,532,058 62.1% 5,857,662 5.2% $230,422,086 4.5% 5-9 978,993 79.3% 6,431,931 10.8% $218,085,669 8.7% 10-19 592,963 89.8% 7,961,281 17.9% $284,251,614 14.2% 20-99 481,496 98.3% 18,880,001 34.5% $746,085,051 28.6% 100-499 81,243 99.8% 15,867,437 48.5% $690,509,553 42.0% 500-999 8,761 99.9% 6,060,684 53.8% $280,489,990 47.4% 1,000-1,999 4,368 99.9% 6,086,182 59.2% $301,705,244 53.3% 2,000-4,999 2.703 99.9% 8,365,242 66.6% $443,817,772 61.9% 5,000+ 1,839 100.0% 37,915,545 100.0% $1,969,530,926 100.0% Total 5,684,424 113,425,965 $5,164,897,905 7 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional, Scientific and Technical Services,” 76 Federal Register 14327, March 16, 2011. 8 543,991 61.9% 5,906,506 5.1% $237,897,059 4.4% 5-9 992,716 79.2% 6,527,943 10.7% $224,438,258 8.5% 10-19 593,641 89.6% 7,974,340 17.6% $290,990,699 13.9% 20-99 494,170 98.2% 19,387,249 34.3% $783,571,581 28.4% 100-499 83,423 99.7% 16,266,855 48.4% $730,638,284 41.9% 500-999 9,061 99.9% 6,266,639 53.7% $296,704,647 47.4% 1,000-1,999 4,487 99.9% 6,250,411 59.2% $320,262,489 53.3% 2,000-4,999 2,762 99.9% 8,480,051 66.5% $459,411,305 61.8% 5,000+ 1,909 100.0% 38,878,474 100.0% $2,070,341,673 100.0% Total 5,726,160 115,938,468 $5,414,255,995 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, “Statistics of U.S. Businesses: U.S. & States, totals,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/ susb/ index.html; and U.S. Census Bureau, “Nonemployer Statistics,” at http://censtats.census.gov/cgi-bin/nonemployer/ nonsect.pl. 9 U.S. Census Bureau, “Nonemployer Statistics: Definitions,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/nonemployer/ definitions.htm. 10 U.S. Census Bureau, “Nonemployer Statistics,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/nonemployer/index.html. Nonemployer firms account for less than 4% of business annual sales or receipts. Congressional Research Service 3 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Source: U.S. Census Bureau, “U.S. Census Bureau, “Statistics of U.S. Businesses: U.S. & States, totals,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/susb/index.html; and “U.S. Census Bureau, “Statistics of U.S. Businesses: U.S., index.html; and U.S. Census Bureau, “Statistics of U.S. Businesses: U.S., NAICS sectors, large employment sizes sizes,” at http://www.census.gov/econ/susb/index.html. a. Employment is measured in March, thus some employer firms (start-ups after March, closures before March, and seasonal firms) will have zero employment and some annual payroll. Most employer firms (62.1%) had 4 or fewer employees, 89.8% had fewer than 20 employees, 98.3% had fewer than 100 employees, and 99.8% had fewer than 500 employees in 2011. The table also provides data concerning three possible economic factors that might be used to define a small business: an employer firm’s number of employees as a share (cumulative percentage) of the total number of employer firms, as a share of employer firm total employment, and as a share of employer firm total annual payroll. As will be discussed, the SBA has traditionally applied economic factors to specific industries, not to cumulative statistics for all employer firms, to determine which firms are small businesses. Nonetheless, the data in Table 1 illustrate how the selection of economic factors used to define small business affects the definition’s outcome. For example, for illustrative purposes only, if the mid-point (50%) for these three economic factors was used to define what is a small business, three different employee firm sizes would be used to designate firms as small: • Businesses would be required to have less than 5 employees to be defined as small if the definition for small used the mid-point (50%) share of the total number of employer firms (employer firms with four or fewer employees accounted for 62.161.9% of the total number of employer firms in 20112012). • Businesses would be required to have less than 1,000 employees to be defined as small if the definition for small used the mid-point (50%) share of employer firm total employment (employer firms with less than 1,000 employees accounted for 53.87% of employer firm total employment in 2011). 2012). Congressional Research Service 4 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues • Businesses would be required to have less than 2,000 employees to be defined as small if the definition for small used the mid-point (50%) share of employer firm total annual payroll (employer firms with less than 2,000 employees accounted for 53.3% of employer firm total annual payroll in 20112012). Other economic factors that might be used to define a small business include the value of the employer firm’s assets or its market share, expressed as a firm’s sales revenue from that market divided by the total sales revenue available in that market or as a firm’s unit sales volume in that market divided by the total volume of units sold in that market. Who Makes the Call? The Small Business Act of 1953 (P.L. 83-163, as amended) authorized the SBA to establish size standards for determining eligibility for small business assistance. More than 5557 years have passed since the SBA established its initial small business size standards on January 1, 1957.1113 Yet, decisions made then concerning the rationale and criteria used to define small businesses established precedents that continue to shape current policy. Moreover, as mentioned previously, 11 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Part 103 - Small Business Size Standards,” 21 Federal Register 9709-9714, December 7, 1956. Congressional Research Service 4 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues since its beginnings the SBA has based its size standards on economic analysis of each industry’s overall competitiveness and the competitiveness of firms within each industry. However, in the absence of precise statutory guidance and consensus on how to define small, the SBA’s size standards have often been challenged, typically by industry representatives seeking to increase the number of firms eligible for assistance and by Members of Congress concerned that the size standards do not adequately target the SBA’s assistance to firms that they consider to be truly small. Over the years, the SBA typically reviewed its size standards piecemeal, reviewing specific industries when the SBA determined that an industry’s market conditions had changed or the SBA was asked to undertake a review by an industry claiming that its market conditions had changed. On five occasions, in 1980, 1982, 1992, 2004, and 2008, the SBA proposed a comprehensive revision of its size standards. The SBA did not fully implement any of these proposals, but the arguments presented, both for and against the proposals, provide a context for understanding the SBA’s current size standards, and the rationale and criteria that have been presented to retain and replace them. In addition, as mentioned previously, P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Act of 2010, requires the SBA to conduct a detailed review of not less than one-third of the SBA’s industry size standards during the 18-month18month period beginning on the date of enactment (September 27, 2010) and during every 18-month18month period thereafter.1214 Early Definitions of Small Business Vary in Approach and Criteria There is no uniform or accepted definition for a small business. Instead, several criteria are used to determine eligibility for small business spending and tax programs.13 This was also the case 15 This was also the case 13 SBA, “Part 103 - Small Business Size Standards,” 21 Federal Register 9709-9714, December 7, 1956. P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Act of 2010, §1344. Updated Size Standards. 15 According to one source, the Internal Revenue Code contains at least 24 different definitions of a small business. See (continued...) 14 Congressional Research Service 5 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues when Congress considered establishing the SBA during the early 1950s. For example, in 1952, the House Select Committee on Small Business reviewed federal statutes, executive branch directives, and the academic literature to serve as a guide for determining how to define small businesses. The Select Committee began its review by asserting that the need to define the concept of small business was based on a general consensus that assisting small business was necessary to enhance economic competition, combat monopoly formation, inhibit the concentration of economic power, and maintain “the integrity of independent enterprise.”1416 It noted that the definition of small businesses in federal statutes reflected this consensus by taking into consideration the firm’s size relative to other firms in its field and “matters of independence and nondominance.”15 For example, the War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944 defined a small business as either 12 P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Act of 2010, §1344. Updated Size Standards. According to one source, the Internal Revenue Code contains at least 24 different definitions of a small business. See Douglas K. Barney, Chris Bjornson, and Steve Wells, “Just How Small Is Your Business?,” The National Public Accountant, August 2003, pp. 4-6, at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m4325/is_2003_August/ai_n25073718/, cited in CRS Report RL32254, Small Business Tax Benefits: Current Law and Main Arguments For and Against Them, by Gary Guenther. 14 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Review of Small Business: 82nd Congress, final report pursuant to H.Res. 33, A Resolution Creating a Select Committee to Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business, 82nd Cong., 2nd sess., December 31, 1952 (Washington: GPO, 1952), pp. 5, 13, 14, 78, and 136. 15 Ibid., p. 3. 13 Congressional Research Service 5 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 17 For example, the War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944 defined a small business as either “employing 250 wage earners or less” or having “sales volumes, quantities of materials consumed, capital investments, or any other criteria which are reasonably attributable to small plants rather than medium- or large-sized plants.”1618 The Selective Service Act of 1948 classified a business as small for military procurement purposes if “(1) its position in the trade or industry of which it is a part is not dominant, (2) the number of its employees does not exceed 500, and (3) it is independently owned and operated.”1719 The Select Committee also found that, for data-gathering purposes, the executive branch defined small businesses in relative, as opposed to absolute, terms within specific industries. For example, the Bureau of Labor Statistics “defined small business in terms of an average for each industry based on the volume of employment or sales. All firms which fall below this average are deemed to be small.”1820 The U.S. Census Bureau also used different criteria for different industries. For example, manufacturing firms were classified as small if they had fewer than 100 employees, wholesalers were considered small if they had annual sales below $200,000, and retailers were considered small if they had annual sales below $50,000. According the Census Bureau, in 1952, small businesses accounted for “roughly 92 percent of all business establishments, 45 percent of all employees, and 34 percent of all dollar value of all sales.”1921 The Select Committee also noted that in 1951, the National Production Authority’s Office of Small Business proposed defining all manufacturing firms with less than 50 employees as small and any with more than 2,500 employees as large. Manufacturers employing between these numbers of employees would be considered large or small depending on the general structure of the industry to which they belonged. The larger the percentage of total output produced by large firms, the larger the number of employees a firm could have to be considered small. Using this definition, most manufacturing firms with less than 50 employees would be classified as small, but others, such as an aircraft manufacturer, could have as many as 2,500 employees and still be considered small.20 For procurement purposes, the Select Committee found that executive branch agencies defined small businesses in absolute, as opposed to relative, terms, using 500 employees as the dividing line between large and small firms. Federal agencies defended the so-called 500 employee rule on the grounds that it “had the advantage of easy administration” across federal agencies.21 In reviewing the academic literature, the Select Committee reported that Abraham Kaplan’s Small Business: Its Place and Problems defined small businesses as those with no more than $1 million in annual sales, $100,000 in total assets, and no more than 250 employees. Applying this 16 Ibid., p. 2. Ibid(...continued) Douglas K. Barney, Chris Bjornson, and Steve Wells, “Just How Small Is Your Business?,” The National Public Accountant, August 2003, pp. 4-6, at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m4325/is_2003_August/ai_n25073718/, cited in CRS Report RL32254, Small Business Tax Benefits: Current Law and Main Arguments For and Against Them, by Gary Guenther. 16 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Review of Small Business: 82nd Congress, final report pursuant to H.Res. 33, A Resolution Creating a Select Committee to Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business, 82nd Cong., 2nd sess., December 31, 1952 (Washington: GPO, 1952), pp. 5, 13, 14, 78, and 136. 17 Ibid., p. 3. 18 Ibid., p. 2. 19 Ibid.; and U.S. Congress, Conference Committee, Selective Service Act of 1948, conference report no. 2438, 80th Cong., 2nd sess., June 19, 1948 (Washington: GPO, 1948), p. 24. 1820 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Review of Small Business: 82nd Congress, final report pursuant to H.Res. 33, A Resolution Creating a Select Committee to Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business, 82nd Cong., 2nd sess., December 31, 1952 (Washington: GPO, 1952), p. 3. 19 Ibid. 20 Ibid., p. 4. 21 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee No. 2, Definition of “Small Business” Within Meaning of the Small Business Act of 1953, as Amended, hearing on H.Res. 114, 84th Cong., 2nd sess., July 5, 1956 (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 19. 17 Congressional Research Service 6 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 21 Ibid. Congressional Research Service 6 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues numbers of employees would be considered large or small depending on the general structure of the industry to which they belonged. The larger the percentage of total output produced by large firms, the larger the number of employees a firm could have to be considered small. Using this definition, most manufacturing firms with less than 50 employees would be classified as small, but others, such as an aircraft manufacturer, could have as many as 2,500 employees and still be considered small.22 For procurement purposes, the Select Committee found that executive branch agencies defined small businesses in absolute, as opposed to relative, terms, using 500 employees as the dividing line between large and small firms. Federal agencies defended the so-called 500 employee rule on the grounds that it “had the advantage of easy administration” across federal agencies.23 In reviewing the academic literature, the Select Committee reported that Abraham Kaplan’s Small Business: Its Place and Problems defined small businesses as those with no more than $1 million in annual sales, $100,000 in total assets, and no more than 250 employees. Applying this definition would have classified about 95% of all business concerns as small, and would have accounted for about half of all nonagricultural employees.2224 Based on its review of federal statutes, executive branch directives, and the academic literature, the Select Committee decided that it would not attempt “to formulate a rigid definition of small business” because “the concept of small business must remain flexible and adaptable to the peculiar needs of each instance in which a definition may be required.”2325 However, it concluded that the definition of small should be a relative one, as opposed to an absolute one, that took into consideration variations among economic sectors: This committee is also convinced that whatever limits may be established to the category of small business, they must vary from industry to industry according to the general industrial pattern of each. Public policy may demand similar treatment for a firm of 2,500 employees in one industry as it does for a firm of 50 employees in another industry. Each may be faced with the same basic problems of economic survival.24 The Small Business Act of 1953’s Definition of Small Provides Room for Interpretation Reflecting the view that formulating a rigid definition of small business was impractical, the Small Business Act of 1953 provided leeway in defining small businesses. It defined a small firm as “one that is independently owned and operated and which is not dominant in its field of operation.”25 The SBA was authorized to establish and subsequently alter size standards for determining eligibility for federal programs to assist small business, some of which are administered by the SBA.26 The act specifies that the size standards “may utilize number of employees, dollar volume of business, net worth, net income, a combination thereof, or other appropriate factors.”27 It also notes that the concept of small is to be defined in a relative sense, varying from industry to industry to the extent necessary to reflect “differing characteristics” among industries.28 22 26 22 Ibid., p. 4. U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee No. 2, Definition of “Small Business” Within Meaning of the Small Business Act of 1953, as Amended, hearing on H.Res. 114, 84th Cong., 2nd sess., July 5, 1956 (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 19. 24 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Review of Small Business: 82nd Congress, final report pursuant to H. Res. 33, A Resolution Creating a Select Committee to Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business, 82nd Cong., 2nd sess., December 31, 1952 (Washington: GPO, 1952), p. 4. See Abraham David Hannath Kaplan, Small Business: Its Place and Problems (NY: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1948), pp. 21, 22. 2325 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Review of Small Business: 82nd Congress, final report pursuant to H.Res. 33, A Resolution Creating a Select Committee to Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business, 82nd Cong., 2nd sess., December 31, 1952 (Washington: GPO, 1952), p. 4. 24 Ibid., p. 5. 25 15 U.S.C. §632(a)(1). 26 Initially, the SBA size standards applied only to its own programs. Other federal agencies used the SBA size standards for procurement purposes on a voluntary basis. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 directed federal agencies to use SBA size standards or establish their own definitions after conferring directly with the SBA’s Bureau (now Office) for Advocacy. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 18. Also, see 5 U.S.C. §601(3). 27 15 U.S.C. §632(a)(2). 28 15 U.S.C. §632(a)(3). Congressional Research Service 7 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 26 Ibid., p. 5. 23 Congressional Research Service 7 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues The Small Business Act of 1953’s Definition of Small Provides Room for Interpretation Reflecting the view that formulating a rigid definition of small business was impractical, the Small Business Act of 1953 provided leeway in defining small businesses. It defined a small firm as “one that is independently owned and operated and which is not dominant in its field of operation.”27 The SBA was authorized to establish and subsequently alter size standards for determining eligibility for federal programs to assist small business, some of which are administered by the SBA.28 The act specifies that the size standards “may utilize number of employees, dollar volume of business, net worth, net income, a combination thereof, or other appropriate factors.”29 It also notes that the concept of small is to be defined in a relative sense, varying from industry to industry to the extent necessary to reflect “differing characteristics” among industries.30 The House Committee on Banking and Currency’s report accompanying H.R. 5141, the Small Business Act of 1953, issued on May 28, 1953, provided the committee’s rationale for not providing a detailed definition of small: It would be impractical to include in the act a detailed definition of small business because of the variation between business groups. It is for this reason that the act authorizes the Administration to determine within any industry the concerns which are to be designated small-business concerns for the purposes of the act.2931 The report did not provide specific guidance concerning what the committee might consider to be small, but it did indicate that data on industry employment, as of March 31, 1948, “reveals that on the basis of employment, small business truly is small in size. Of the approximately 4 million business concerns, 87.4% had under 8 employees and 95.2% of the total number of concerns, employed less than 20 people.”3032 27 15 U.S.C. §632(a)(1). Initially, the SBA size standards applied only to its own programs. Other federal agencies used the SBA size standards for procurement purposes on a voluntary basis. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 directed federal agencies to use SBA size standards or establish their own definitions after conferring directly with the SBA’s Bureau (now Office) for Advocacy. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 18. Also, see 5 U.S.C. §601(3). 29 15 U.S.C. §632(a)(2). 30 15 U.S.C. §632(a)(3). 31 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Banking and Currency, Small Business Act of 1953, report to accompany H.R. 5141, 83rd Cong., 1st sess., May 28, 1953, H.Rept. 83-494 (Washington: GPO, 1953), p. 3. 32 Ibid., p. 4. 28 Congressional Research Service 8 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Industry Challenges the SBA’s Initial Size Standards, Claiming They Are Too Restrictive Initially, the SBA created two sets of size standards, one for federal procurement preference and set-aside programs and another for the SBA’s loan and management training services. At the request of federal agencies, the SBA adopted the then-prevailing small business size standard used by federal agencies for procurement, which was 500 or fewer employees. The SBA retained the right to make exceptions to the 500 or fewer employee procurement size standard if the SBA determined that a firm having more than 500 employees was not dominant in its industry. For the SBA’s loan and management training services, the SBA’s staff reviewed economic data provided by the Census Bureau to arrive at what Wendell Barnes, SBA’s administrator, described at a congressional hearing in 1956 as “a fairly accurate conclusion as to what comprises small business in each industry.”3133 Jules Abels, SBA’s economic advisor to the administrator, explained at that congressional hearing how the SBA’s staff determined what constituted a small business: There are various techniques for the demarcation lines, but in a study of almost any industry, you will find a large cluster of small concerns around a certain figure.... On the other hand, above a certain dividing line you will find relatively few and as you map out a picture of an industry it appears that a dividing line at a certain point is fair.3234 On January 5, 1956, the SBA published a notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register announcing its first proposed small business size standards.3335 During the public comment period, representatives of several industries argued that the proposed standards were too restrictive and 29 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Banking and Currency, Small Business Act of 1953, report to accompany H.R. 5141, 83rd Cong., 1st sess., May 28, 1953, H.Rept. 83-494 (Washington: GPO, 1953), p. 3. 30 Ibid., p. 4. 31 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee No. 2, Definition of “Small Business” Within Meaning of the Small Business Act of 1953, as Amended, hearing on H. Res. 114, 84th Cong., 2nd sess., July 5, 1956 (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 24. 32 Ibid., p. 39. 33 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards,” 21 Federal Register 79-80, January 5, 1956. Congressional Research Service 8 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues excluded too many firms. In response, Mr. Abels testified that the SBA decided to adjust its figures to make them “a little bit more liberal because there was some feeling on the part of certain industries that they were too tight and that they excluded too many firms.”3436 The SBA published its final rule concerning its small business size standards on December 7, 1956, and they became effective on January 1, 1957.3537 The SBA decided to use number of employees as the sole criterion for determining if manufacturing firms were small and annual sales or annual receipts as the sole criterion for all other industries. Mr. Abels explained at the congressional hearing the SBA’s rationale for using number of employees for classifying manufacturing firms as small and annual sales or annual receipts for all other firms: in the absence of automation which would give one firm in an industry a great advantage over another, roughly speaking if the firms were mechanized to the same extent, a firm with 33 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee No. 2, Definition of “Small Business” Within Meaning of the Small Business Act of 1953, as Amended, hearing on H. Res. 114, 84th Cong., 2nd sess., July 5, 1956 (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 24. 34 Ibid., p. 39. 35 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards,” 21 Federal Register 79-80, January 5, 1956. 36 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee No. 2, Definition of “Small Business” Within Meaning of the Small Business Act of 1953, as Amended, hearing on H. Res. 114, 84th Cong., 2nd sess., July 5, 1956 (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 40. 37 SBA, “Part 103 - Small Business Size Standards,” 21 Federal Register 9709-9714, December 7, 1956. Congressional Research Service 9 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 400 employees would have an output which would be twice as large as the output of a firm with 200 employees.... However when you depart from the manufacturing field and go into, say, a distributive field or trade, it then becomes necessary to discard the number of employees, because it is a matter of judicial notice, that one man for example in the distributive trades can sell as much as 100 men can sell. One small construction firm possibly can do a lot more business than one with a lot more employees. A service trade again has its volume geared to something other than the number of employees. So I think that one can say with reasonable certainty that it is only within the manufacturing field that the employee standard is the uniform yardstick, but that other than manufacturing the dollar volume is the appropriate yardstick.3638 The SBA’s initial size standards defined most manufacturing firms employing 250 or fewer employees as small. In addition, the SBA considered manufacturing firms in some industries (e.g., metalworking and small arms) as small if they employed 500 or fewer employees, and in some others (e.g., sugar refining and tractors) as small if they employed 1,000 or fewer employees. To be considered small, wholesalers were required to have annual sales volume of $5 million or less; construction firms had to have average annual receipts of $5 million or less over the preceding three years; trucking and warehousing firms had to have annual receipts of $2 million or less; taxicab companies and most firms in the service trades had to have annual receipts of $1 million or less; and most retail firms had to have annual sales of $1 million or less.3739 Mr. Abels testified that the SBA experienced “continual” protests of its size standards by firms denied financial or support assistance because they were not considered small. He also testified that in each case, the SBA denied the protest and determined, in his words, that the standard was “valid and accurate.”38 34 U.S. Congress, House Select Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee No. 2, Definition of “Small Business” Within Meaning of the Small Business Act of 1953, as Amended, hearing on H. Res. 114, 84th Cong., 2nd sess., July 5, 1956 (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 40. 35 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Part 103 - Small Business Size Standards,” 21 Federal Register 9709-9714, December 7, 1956. 36 Ibid., p. 41. 37 Ibid., p. 3. In the retail sector, department and variety stores, grocery stores with fresh meats, and new and used automobile stores were considered small if they had annual sales volume of $2 million or less. In the service trades sector, hotels and power industry firms were considered small if they had annual receipts of $2 million or less. 38 Ibid., p. 40. Congressional Research Service 9 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 40 The SBA also experienced some opposition to its decision to adopt the then-prevailing 500 or fewer employee size standard for all industries for federal procurement preference and set-aside programs. For example, Irvin Maness, subcommittee counsel for the Select Committee on Small Business Subcommittee No. 2, argued during a congressional oversight hearing in 1956 that the SBA’s use of the so-called rule of 500 employees as the size standard for procurement violated congressional intent, which he argued was to have a definition for small business that varied “on an industry-to-industry basis.”3941 Several Members also objected to the possibility that some firms could be considered small for procurement purposes, but not for the SBA’s loan and management training services. 38 Ibid., p. 41. Ibid., p. 3. In the retail sector, department and variety stores, grocery stores with fresh meats, and new and used automobile stores were considered small if they had annual sales volume of $2 million or less. In the service trades sector, hotels and power industry firms were considered small if they had annual receipts of $2 million or less. 40 Ibid., p. 40. 41 Ibid., pp. 33, 43. 39 Congressional Research Service 10 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues GAO and Several Members of Congress Challenge the SBA’s Size Standards, Claiming They Are Too Broad In 1977, the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO, now the U.S. Government Accountability Office) was asked by the Select Committee on Small Business to review the SBA’s size standards. At that time, most of the SBA’s size standards remained at their original 1957 levels, other than a one-time upward adjustment for inflation in 1975 for industries using annual sales and receipts to restore eligibility to firms that may have lost small-business status due solely to the effect of inflation.4042 GAO’s report, issued in 1978, noted that the SBA’s regulations indicated that the SBA used the following factors in formulating its size standards: • because the purpose of SBA assistance is to preserve free competitive enterprise by strengthening the competitive position of small business concerns, the size standards should be limited to the segment of each industry that is struggling to become or remain competitive; • because smaller concerns often are forced to compete with middle-sized as compared with very large concerns, the standard for each industry should be established as low as reasonably possible; and • small businesses should not rely on continuing assistance but should plan for the day when they will be able to compete without assistance.41 39 Ibid., pp. 33, 43. 43 After conducting its analysis, GAO found that the SBA’s size standards “are often high and often are not justified by economic rationale.”44 Specifically, GAO reported that many size standards may not direct assistance to the target group described in SBA regulations as businesses “struggling to become or remain competitive” because the loan and procurement size standards for most industries were established 15 or more years ago and have not been periodically reviewed; SBA records do not indicate how most standards were developed; and the standards often define as small a very high percentage of the firms in the industries to which they apply.45 42 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on General Oversight and Minority Enterprise, Size Standards for Small Business, hearing, 96th Cong., 1st sess., July 10, 1979 (Washington: GPO, 1979), p. 3. GAO reported that adjustments to the size standards had been made to “only 81 of the 534 industries covered by the special standards” from January 1, 1968 through April 25, 1978. The upward inflation adjustments for industries using annual sales or receipts ranged from 10.3% to 92.9% depending on the date when the standards were adopted. See U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards,” 40 Federal Register 24210-24215, June 5, 1975, and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards Regulation,” 40 Federal Register 32824-32826, August 5, 1975. 4143 U.S. General Accounting Office, What Is A Small Business? The Small Business Administration Needs To Reexamine Its Answer, CED-78-149, August 9, 1978, pp. 1, 2, at http://www.gao.gov/assets/130/123644.pdf. 4044 Ibid., p. 3. 45 Ibid. Congressional Research Service 1011 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues After conducting its analysis, GAO found that the SBA’s size standards “are often high and often are not justified by economic rationale.”42 Specifically, GAO reported that many size standards may not direct assistance to the target group described in SBA regulations as businesses “struggling to become or remain competitive” because the loan and procurement size standards for most industries were established 15 or more years ago and have not been periodically reviewed; SBA records do not indicate how most standards were developed; and the standards often define as small a very high percentage of the firms in the industries to which they apply.43 GAO recommended that the SBA reexamine its size standards “by collecting data on the size of bidders on set-aside and unrestricted contracts, determining the size of businesses which need setaside protection because they cannot otherwise obtain Federal contracts” and then consider reducing its size standards or “establishing a two-tiered system for set-aside contracts, under which certain procurements would be available for bidding only to the smaller firms and others would be opened for bidding to all businesses considered small under present standards.”4446 Citing the GAO report, several Members objected to the SBA’s size standards at a House Committee on Small Business oversight hearing conducted on July 10, 1979. Representative John J. LaFalce, chair of the House Committee on Small Business Subcommittee on General Oversight and Minority Enterprise, stated that “what we have faced from 1953 to the present is virtually nothing other than acquiescence to the demands of the special interest groups. That is how the size standards have been set.”4547 Representative Tim Lee Carter, the subcommittee’s ranking minority Member, stated that “it seems to me that we may be fast growing into just a regular bank forum not just to small business but to all business.”4648 At that time, approximately 99% of all firms with employees were classified by the SBA as a small business.4749 Roger Rosenberger, SBA’s associate administrator for policy, planning and budgeting, testified at the hearing that the SBA would undertake a comprehensive economic analysis of industry data to determine if its size standards should be changed. However, he also defended the validity of the SBA’s size standards, arguing that the task of setting size standards was a complicated and difficult one because of “how market structure and size distribution of firms vary from industry to industry.”4850 He testified that some industries are dominated by a few large firms, some are comprised almost entirely of small businesses, and others “can be referred to as a mixed industry.”4951 He argued that each market structure presents unique challenges for defining small businesses within that industry group. For example, he argued that it was debatable whether the 42 Ibid., p. 3. Ibid. 44 Ibid., p. 20. 45 SBA should provide any assistance to any of the businesses within industries where “smaller firms are flourishing.”52 He added that We have no problem identifying either the very small firms or the large firms, in any given industry. Our problem is with that gray area–the so-called mid-sized firm. Should the midsized firm be included or excluded based on the competitive aspects of the market? Should we assist competition in an industry by aiding the mid-sized firms, since they probably represent the only major competitive force vis-a-vis the dominant companies given that these firms may also compete with the very small firms?53 46 Ibid., p. 20. U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on General Oversight and Minority Enterprise, Size Standards for Small Business, hearing, 96th Cong., 1st sess., July 10, 1979 (Washington: GPO, 1979), p. 9. 4648 Ibid., p. 6. 4749 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 14. 4850 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on General Oversight and Minority Enterprise, Size Standards for Small Business, hearing, 96th Cong., 1st sess., July 10, 1979 (Washington: GPO, 1979), p. 17. 4951 Ibid. 4352 Ibid., p. 28. 53 Ibid. 47 Congressional Research Service 1112 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues SBA should provide any assistance to any of the businesses within industries where “smaller firms are flourishing.”50 He added that We have no problem identifying either the very small firms or the large firms, in any given industry. Our problem is with that gray area–the so-called mid-sized firm. Should the midsized firm be included or excluded based on the competitive aspects of the market? Should we assist competition in an industry by aiding the mid-sized firms, since they probably represent the only major competitive force vis-a-vis the dominant companies given that these firms may also compete with the very small firms?51 SBA Proposes More Restrictive Size Standards Based on Industry Competitiveness On March 10, 1980, the SBA issued a notice of proposed rulemaking for “a substantial revision of its size standards.”5254 In an effort to “simplify SBA programs for the small business community, reduce administrative complexity, and increase the effectiveness of SBA programs by improved targeting of its resources,” the SBA proposed to replace its two sets of size standards, one for procurement preference and set-aside programs and another for its loan and consultative support services, with a single set of size standards for both purposes.5355 The SBA also proposed to use a single factor, the firm’s number of employees, for definitional purposes for nearly all industries instead of using the firm’s number of employees for some industries, the firm’s assets for others, and the firm’s annual gross receipts for still others. The SBA argued that when size standards are denominated in dollars, i.e., annual revenues, its ability to help the small business sector is undermined by inflation. Using employment, as opposed to dollar sales, will provide greater stability for SBA and its clients; will remove inter-industry distortions generated by differential inflation rates; and reduce the need for SBA to make frequent revisions in the size standards merely to reflect price increases.5456 In setting its proposed new size standards for each industry (ranging from 15 or fewer employees to 2,500 or fewer employees), the SBA first placed each industry into one of three groups: concentrated, competitive, or mixed. Concentrated industries are “characterized by a highly unequal distribution of sales among the firms in the industry, e.g., the four largest firms accounting for more than half the industry’s sales.”5557 Competitive industries “display a more equal distribution of sales, and the average firm is relatively small when measured by annual sales or number of employees.”5658 In competitive industries, the four largest firms typically account for less than 20% of industry sales. Mixed industries do not “meet the criteria of competitive or 50 Ibid., p. 28. Ibid. 52concentrated industries.”59 In mixed industries, the four largest firms typically account for 20% to 50% of industry sales.60 The SBA determined that there were 160 concentrated industries, 317 competitive industries, and 249 mixed industries.61 The SBA argued that establishing a size standard for the 160 concentrated industries was a “straight-forward task—simply identify and exclude those few firms which 54 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standards, hearing, 96th Cong., 2nd sess., March 13, 1980 (Washington: GPO, 1980), p. III. 5355 Ibid., p. 49. 5456 Ibid., p. 50. 55 Ibid., p. 48. 56 Ibid. 51 Congressional Research Service 12 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues concentrated industries.”57 In mixed industries, the four largest firms typically account for 20% to 50% of industry sales.58 The SBA determined that there were 160 concentrated industries, 317 competitive industries, and 249 mixed industries.59 The SBA argued that establishing a size standard for the 160 concentrated industries was a “straight-forward task—simply identify and exclude those few firms which 57 Ibid., p. 48. 58 Ibid. 59 Ibid. 60 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 19. 61 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standards, hearing, 96th Cong., 2nd sess., March 13, 1980 (Washington: GPO, 1980), p. 48. Congressional Research Service 13 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues account for a disproportionately large share of the industry’s sales.”6062 For competitive industries, the SBA argued that the size standard should be set “relatively low, so as to support entry and moderate growth.”6163 The SBA argued that mixed industries require “relatively high size standards ... to reinforce competition and offset the pressures to increase the degree of concentration in these industries.”6264 The proposed new SBA size standards would have had the net effect of reducing the number of firms classified as small by about 225,000.6365 In percentage terms, the number of firms classified as small would have been reduced from about 99% of all employer firms to 96%.6466 Over 86% of the more than 1,500 public comments received by the SBA concerning its proposed new size standards criticized the proposal. Most of the criticism was from firms that would no longer be considered small under the new size standards.6567 In addition, several federal agencies indicated that the proposed size standards in the services and construction industries were set too low, reducing the number of small firms eligible to compete for procurement contracts below levels they deemed necessary to ensure adequate competition to prevent agency costs from rising. They also argued that the proposed size standards would reduce the number of firms eligible to compete for procurement contracts that are “sufficiently large to perform the majority of [procurement] set-aside programs.”6668 For example, the Department of Defense argued that “the small business firms must have the infrastructure both capitalwise and employeewise to compete in this particular area. They cannot be ‘Mom and Pop Shops’ which some of the proposed size standards [would require].”6769 It also argued that in the services area “the receipt of the very first contract would automatically make many small business firms large business. We think that is wrong.”6870 On October 21, 1980, Congress provided additional time to consider the consequences of the proposed changes to the size standards by adopting the Small Business Export Expansion Act of 57 Ibid. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 19. 59 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standards, hearing, 96th Cong., 2nd sess., March 13, 1980 (Washington: GPO, 1980), p. 48. 60 Ibid., p. 49. 61 Ibid. 62 Ibid. 63 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 11. 64 Ibid., p. 25. 65 Ibid., pp. 4, 10, 16. 66 Ibid., pp. 21, 43. 67 Ibid., p. 43. 68 Ibid., p. 44. 58 Congressional Research Service 13 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 1980 (P.L. 96-481). It prohibited “the SBA from promulgating any final rule or regulation relating relating to small business size standards until March 31, 1981.”6971 In the meantime, the Reagan Administration entered office, and, as is customary when there is a change in Administration, replaced the SBA’s senior leadership. The SBA’s new administrator, Michael Cardenas, praised the previous (Carter) Administration’s efforts to (1) apply a comprehensive rationale (based on industry competitiveness), as opposed to a piecemeal approach, for determining the SBA size standards; (2) adopt a single size standard as a means to prevent the possibility of firms qualifying for procurement preferences, but not for the SBA’s loan and consultative support services; and (3) increase the reliance on the firm’s number 62 Ibid., p. 49. Ibid. 64 Ibid. 65 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 11. 66 Ibid., p. 25. 67 Ibid., pp. 4, 10, 16. 68 Ibid., pp. 21, 43. 69 Ibid., p. 43. 70 Ibid., p. 44. 71 Ibid., p. 5; and P.L. 96-481, the Small Business Export Expansion Act of 1980. 63 Congressional Research Service 14 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues of employees, as opposed to its annual sales and receipts, for most industries as a means to avoid having to update the size standards to reflect inflation.7072 However, he was sympathetic to the concerns of federal agencies that the proposed size standards in the services and construction industries were set too low to meet those agencies’ procurement needs. As a result, he indicated that the SBA would modify its size standards proposal by increasing the proposed size standards for 51 industries, mostly in the services and construction industries. He also indicated that the proposed size standards in 157 manufacturing industries would be lowered (typically from 2,500 or fewer employees to 500 or fewer employees) to prevent one or more of the largest producers in those industries from being classified as small. He also increased the SBA’s proposed lowest size standard from 15 or fewer employees to 25 or fewer employees. This change would have affected 93 service and trade industries. HeMr. Cardenas testified on May 5, 1981, before the Senate Committee on Small Business, that these changes have the net effect of restoring approximately 60,000 firms to eligibility out of a total of 225,000 firms (including farms) that had been removed from eligibility in the advance notice. Since the SBA estimates that there are at present a total of 7.3 million firms in the United States (based on Bureau of the Census data), the proposed changes actually impact on only a small proportion of firms in the economy.7173 The SBA did not formally issue a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning its new size standards proposal. Instead, for more than a year, it met with various trade organizations and federal agency procurement officials to discuss the proposal. As these consultations took place, the SBA experienced turnover in its senior leadership. The SBA, headed by the new appointee, James C. Sanders, issued a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning its size standards on May 3, 1982. Mr. Sanders testified before the House Committee on Small Business Subcommittee on SBA and SBIC Authority, Minority Enterprise and General Small Business Problems, on October 20, 1983, that the SBA’s May 3, 1982, proposed notice of rulemaking differed from its March 10, 1980, predecessor in three important ways: First, the range of size standards was narrowed to a range of 25 employees to 500 employees. This reflected a widespread view that 15 employees was too low a cutoff while 2,500 employees was too high. Second, SBA proposed a 500-employee ceiling, focusing on smaller firms. Third, SBA responded to sentiments within many procurement-sensitive 69 Ibid., p. 5; and P.L. 96-481, the Small Business Export Expansion Act of 1980. industries that the proposed size standards in some cases were too low to accommodate the average procurement currently being performed by small business. Therefore, SBA proposed higher size standards in a number of procurement-sensitive industries, while maintaining the 500-employee cap.74 72 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Small Business Administration’s Size Standards, hearing, 97th Cong., 1st sess., May 5, 1981 (Washington: GPO, 1981), p. 12. 71 Ibid., p. 11. 70 Congressional Research Service 14 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues industries that the proposed size standards in some cases were too low to accommodate the average procurement currently being performed by small business. Therefore, SBA proposed higher size standards in a number of procurement-sensitive industries, while maintaining the 500-employee cap.7273 Ibid., p. 11. 74 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on SBA and SBIC Authority, Minority Enterprise and General Small Business Problems, Size Standards, hearing, 98th Cong., 1st sess., October 20, 1983 (Washington: GPO, 1983), p. 17. Congress created the Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) program in 1958 to provide small businesses enhanced access to equity capital, long-term loans, and consultative management assistance. Congressional Research Service 15 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues He also testified that the SBA received about 500 comments on the proposed rule, with about 72% of those comments opposing the rule.7375 Taking those comments into consideration, the SBA reexamined its size standards once again, and, after a year of further consultation with various trade organizations and federal agency procurement officials, issued another notice of proposed rulemaking on May 6, 1983. The 1983 proposal replaced the use of two sets of size standards, one for procurement and another for the SBA’s loan and consultative support services, with a single set for all programs; retained most of the size standards that were expressed in terms of average annual sales or receipts; adjusted those size standards for inflation (an upward adjustment of 81%); retained most of the size standards for manufacturing; and made relatively minor changes to the size standards in other industries, with a continued emphasis on a 500-employee ceiling for most industries. The SBA received 630 comments on the proposed rule, with almost 70% supporting it.7476 SBA Administrator Sanders characterized the SBA’s revised size standard proposal as “a finetuning of current standards which has the basic support of both the private sector and the Federal agencies that use the basic size standards to achieve their set-aside procurement goals.”7577 He also added that “since almost no size standard is proposed to decrease, and most will in fact increase, very few firms will lose their small business status. We estimate that about 39,000 firms will gain small business status.”7678 He testified that in percentage terms, in 1983, 97.9% of the nation’s 5.2 million firms with employees were classified by the SBA as small. Under the SBA’s proposal, 98.6% of all firms with employees would be classified as small.7779 The final rule was published in the Federal Register on February 9, 1984.7880 Representative Parren J. Mitchell, chair of the House Committee on Small Business, expressed disappointment in the SBA’s final rule, stating at a congressional oversight hearing on July 30, 1985, that “the government and the business community are still victimized by that same ad hoc, sporadic system that the SBA promised to fix some six years ago.”7981 He introduced legislation 72 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on SBA and SBIC Authority, Minority Enterprise and General Small Business Problems, Size Standards, hearing, 98th Cong., 1st sess., October 20, 1983 (Washington: GPO, 1983), p. 17. Congress created the Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) program in 1958 to provide small businesses enhanced access to equity capital, long-term loans, and consultative management assistance. 73 (H.R. 1178, a bill to amend the Small Business Act) that would have required the SBA to adjust its size standard for an industrial classification downward by at least 20% if small business’ share of that market equaled or exceeded 60%, and at least 40% of the market share was achieved through the receipt of federal procurement contracts. The bill also mandated a minimum 10% increase in the SBA’s size standard for an industrial classification if small business’ share of that market was less than 20% and less than 10% of the market share was achieved through the receipt 75 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on SBA and SBIC Authority, Minority Enterprise and General Small Business Problems, H.R. 1178: Small Business Size Standards, hearing, 99th Cong., 1st sess., July 30, 1985 (Washington: GPO, 1985), p. 198. 7476 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on SBA and SBIC Authority, Minority Enterprise and General Small Business Problems, Size Standards, hearing, 98th Cong., 1st sess., October 20, 1983 (Washington: GPO, 1983), p. 18. 7577 Ibid. 7678 Ibid. 7779 Ibid. 7880 Ibid. 7981 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on SBA and SBIC Authority, Minority Enterprise and General Small Business Problems, H.R. 1178: Small Business Size Standards, hearing, 99th Cong., 1st (continued...)sess., July 30, 1985 (Washington: GPO, 1985), p. 4. Congressional Research Service 1516 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues (H.R. 1178, a bill to amend the Small Business Act) that would have required the SBA to adjust its size standard for an industrial classification downward by at least 20% if small business’ share of that market equaled or exceeded 60%, and at least 40% of the market share was achieved through the receipt of federal procurement contracts. The bill also mandated a minimum 10% increase in the SBA’s size standard for an industrial classification if small business’ share of that market was less than 20% and less than 10% of the market share was achieved through the receipt of federal procurement contracts.80of federal procurement contracts.82 The bill was opposed by various trade associations, the SBA, and federal agency procurement officials, and was not reported out of committee.8183 SBA Proposes to Streamline its Size Standards In 1992, the SBA usedhad 30 different industry size standards (e.g., 100 or fewer employees, 500 or fewer fewer employees, 1,000 or fewer employees, $5 million in average annual receipts) when classifying for classifying firms as small. On December 31, 1992, the SBA issued a notice of proposed rulemaking that was designed “to streamline its size standards by reducing the number of fixed size standard levels to nine.”8284 The nine proposed size standards were 100 or fewer, 500 or fewer, 750 or fewer, 1,000 or fewer, or 1,500 or fewer employees; and no more than $5 million, $10 million, $18 million, or $24 million in annual receipts. The annual receipts levels reflected an upward adjustment of 43% for inflation. The SBA argued that the “current system of 30 size standard levels has led to confusion and has created a needless complication of the size standards.”8385 The SBA claimed that proposed changes to the size standards would make them more user-friendly for small business owners. It would also restore eligibility to nearly 20,000 firms that were no longer considered small solely because of the effects of inflation. The proposed rule was later withdrawn as a courtesy to allow the incoming Clinton Administration time to review the proposal.8486 The SBA ultimately decided not to pursue this approach because it felt that converting “receipts- based size standards in effect at that time to one of four proposed receipts levels created a number of unacceptable anomalies.”8587 Over the subsequent decade, the SBA reviewed the size standards for some industries on a piecemeal basis and, in 1994, adjusted for inflation its size standards based on firm’s annual sales or receipts (an upward adjustment of 48.2%). The SBA estimated that the adjustment would restore eligibility to approximately 20,000 firms that lost small-business status due solely to the effects of inflation.86 (...continued) sess., July 30, 1985 (Washington: GPO, 1985), p. 4. 80 Ibid., pp. 237-250. 81 Ibid., pp. 6, 8, 53, 153, 181, 244, 245, 261. 82 U.S. Small Business Administration88 In 2002, the SBA adjusted for inflation its annual sales and receipts based size standards for the fourth time (an upward adjustment of 15.8%). The SBA estimated that the adjustment would restore eligibility to approximately 8,760 firms that lost small-business status due solely to the effects of inflation. The rule also included a provision that the SBA would assess the impact of inflation on its annual sales- and receipts based size standards at least once every five years.89 82 Ibid., pp. 237-250. Ibid., pp. 6, 8, 53, 153, 181, 244, 245, 261. 84 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Fixed Size Standard Levels,” 57 Federal Register 62515, December 31, 1992. 8385 Ibid. 8486 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on Minority Enterprise, Finance, and Urban Development, SBA’s Efforts to Streamline Size Standards, hearing, 103rd Cong., 1st sess., May 25, 1993 (Washington: GPO, 1993), pp. 5, 6. 85 U.S. Small Business Administration87 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Restructuring of Size Standards,” 69 Federal Register 13130, March 19, 2004. 8688 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjusted Size Standards,” 59 Federal Register 16513-16538, April 7, 1994. Congressional Research Service 16 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues In 2002, the SBA adjusted for inflation its annual sales- and receipts-based size standards for the fourth time (an upward adjustment of 15.8%). The SBA estimated that the adjustment would restore eligibility to approximately 8,760 firms that lost small-business status due solely to the effects of inflation. The rule also included a provision that the SBA would assess the impact of inflation on its annual sales- and receipts-based size standards at least once every five years.87 89 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Size Standards,” 67 Federal Register 65285-65290, October 24, 2002. 83 Congressional Research Service 17 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Then, on March 19, 2004, the SBA, once again, issued a notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register to streamline its size standards.8890 The proposed rule would have established size standards based on the firm’s number of employees for all industries, avoiding the need to adjust for inflation size standards based on sales or receipts.8991 At that time, the SBA size standards consisted of 37 different size levels which applied to 1,151 industries and 13 sub-industry activities in the North American Industry Classification System. Thirty size standards were based on annual sales or receipts, five on number of employees (both full- and part-time), one on financial assets, and one on generating capacity. Under the proposed rule, the SBA would use 10 size standards, 5 new employee size standards (adding 50 or fewer, 150 or fewer, 200 or fewer, 300 or fewer, and 400 or fewer employees), and the existing 5 employee size standards (100 or fewer, 500 or fewer, 750 or fewer, 1,000 or fewer, and 1,500 or fewer employees).9092 The proposed rule would not have changed any of the size standards that were already based on number of employees. It would have converted size standards based on receipts, sales, assets, or generating capacity to an employee- based size standard. The SBA argued that the use of a single size standard would “help to simplify size standards” and “tends to be a more stable measure of business size” than other measures.9193 It added that the proposed rule would change 514 size standards and that, after the proposed conversion to the use of number of employees, of the “approximately 4.4 million businesses in the industries with revised size standards, 35,200 businesses could gain and 34,100 could lose small business eligibility, with the net effect of 1,100 additional businesses defined as small.”9294 The SBA received more than 4,500 comments on the proposed rule, with a majority (51%) supporting the rule, but with “a large number of comments opposing various aspects of SBA’s approach to simplifying size standards.”9395 In addition, Representative Donald Manzullo, chair of the House Committee on Small Business, and Senator Olympia Snowe, chair of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, opposed the proposed rule.94 Senator John 87 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Size Standards,” 67 Federal Register 65285-65290, October 24, 2002. 88 U.S. Small Business Administration96 Senator John Kerry, ranking minority Member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, sent a letter to the SBA requesting that it “rescind its proposal to restructure the way companies are determined to be small businesses” because “small business advocates have informed me that this proposal could threaten or eliminate over 8 million jobs” and “the proposal would punish the 34,000 firms that are currently considered small, have been acting in good faith 90 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Restructuring of Size Standards,” 69 Federal Register 13129-13164, March 19, 2004. 8991 Ibid. 9092 Ibid., p. 13130. 9193 Ibid., pp. 13131-13132. 9294 Ibid., p. 13138. 93 U.S. Small Business Administration95 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Selected Size Standards Issues,” 69 Federal Register 70197, December 3, 2004; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Selected Size Standards Issues,” 70 Federal Register 2976, January 19, 2005. 94 Representative96 Rep. Donald A. Manzullo and RepresentativeRep. Nydia M. Velázquez, “Small Business Size Standards; Restructuring of Size Standards, 69 Federal Register 13,130 (March 19, 2004); Letter to Gary M. Jackson, SBA Assistant Administrator for Size Standards,” July 8, 2004, at http://democrats.smallbusiness.house.gov/ Size%20Standards%20Comment%20Letter%200704.pdf; and U.S. Newswire, “Snowe Hails SBA’s Withdrawal of (continued...) Congressional Research Service 17New Size Standards Proposal; Decision Spares Small Firms Costly Disruptions,” July 1, 2004, p. 1, at http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=657675071&sid=1&Fmt=3&clientId=45714&RQT=309&VName=PQD. Congressional Research Service 18 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Kerry, ranking minority Member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, sent a letter to the SBA requesting that it “rescind its proposal to restructure the way companies are determined to be small businesses” because “small business advocates have informed me that this proposal could threaten or eliminate over 8 million jobs” and “the proposal would punish the 34,000 firms that are currently considered small, have been acting in good faith with the Federal government, but will lose their small business status abruptly as a result of the change.”9597 The SBA withdrew the proposed rule on July 1, 2004. Senator Snowe was quoted in a press interview later that day that she supported the SBA’s decision to rescind the proposed rule: At the eleventh hour, the SBA has corrected its course and averted costly disruptions for small businesses across the country.... The SBA’s proposed rule would have sent a tidal wave crashing over small business, effectively wiping out the foundation on which countless firms currently operate. Small firms still recovering from last year’s slow economy are in no shape to cope with such a sea change in the regulatory landscape.9698 Senator Snowe reportedly urged the SBA to proceed cautiously with any future effort to restructure its size standards, emphasizing that any such effort should include a thorough dialogue with business owners and Congress.9799 In 2005, the SBA adjusted for inflation size standards based on firms’ annual sales or receipts (an upward adjustment of 8.7%). The SBA estimated that the adjustment restored eligibility to approximately 12,000 firms that lost small-business status due solely to the effects of inflation. In 2008, the SBA made another adjustment for inflation to its annual sales- and receipts- based standards (another upward adjustment of 8.7%). The SBA estimated that the adjustment restored eligibility for approximately 10,400 firms that lost small-business status due solely to the effects of inflation.98100 SBA Adopts a More Incremental, Targeted Approach In June 2008, the SBA announced that it would undertake a comprehensive, two-year review of its size standards, proceeding one industrial sector at a time, starting with Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and Other Services (...continued) New Size Standards Proposal; Decision Spares Small Firms Costly Disruptions,” July 1, 2004, p. 1, at http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=657675071&sid=1&Fmt=3&clientId=45714&RQT=309&VName=PQD. 95 (NAICS Sector 81).101 The SBA argued that it was concerned that “not all of its size standards may now adequately define small businesses in the U.S. economy, which has seen industry consolidations, technological advances, emerging new industries, shifting societal preferences, and other significant industrial changes.”102 It added that its reliance on an ad hoc approach “to scrutinizing the limited number of specific industries during a year, while worthwhile, leaves 97 U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, “Kerry Urges SBA to Withdraw Small Business Size Standard Proposal,” press release, June 29, 2004, at http://sbc.senate.gov/press/record.cfm?id=223511. 9698 U.S. Newswire, “Snowe Hails SBA’s Withdrawal of New Size Standards Proposal; Decision Spares Small Firms Costly Disruptions,” July 1, 2004, p. 1, at http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=657675071&sid=1&Fmt=3&clientId= 45714&RQT=309&VName=PQD. 97 Ibid. 98 U.S. Small Business Administration99 Ibid. 100 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards, Inflation Adjustment to Size Standards; Business Loan Program; Disaster Assistance Loan Program,” 70 Federal Register 72577, December 6, 2005; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Size Standards; Business Loan Program, and Disaster Assistance Loan Program,” 73 Federal Register 41237-41254, July 18, 2008. Congressional Research Service 18 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues (NAICS Sector 81).99 The SBA argued that it was concerned that “not all of its size standards may now adequately define small businesses in the U.S. economy, which has seen industry consolidations, technological advances, emerging new industries, shifting societal preferences, and other significant industrial changes.”100 It added that its reliance on an ad hoc approach “to scrutinizing the limited number of specific industries during a year, while worthwhile, leaves 101 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Public Meetings on a Comprehensive Review of Small Business Size Standards,” 73 Federal Register 30440-30442, May 27, 2008. Other Services (NAICS Sector 81) include repair and maintenance, personal and laundry services, and religious, grantmaking, civic, professional, and similar organizations. 102 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Public Meetings on a Comprehensive Review of Small Business Size Standards,” 73 Federal Register 30441, May 27, 2008. Congressional Research Service 19 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues unexamined many deserving industries for updating and may create over time a set of illogical size standards.”101103 The SBA announced that it would begin its analysis of its size standards by assuming that “$6.5 million [now $7.0 million] is an appropriate size standard for those industries with receipts size standards and 500 employees for those industries with employee size standards.”102104 It would then analyze the following industry characteristics: “average firm size; average asset size (a proxy for startup costs); competition, as measured by the market share of the four largest firms in the industry; and, the distribution of market share by firm size—that is, are firms in the industry generally very small firms, or dominated by very large firms.”103105 Then, before making its final determination on the size standard, it would “examine the participation of small businesses in federal contracting and SBA’s guaranteed loan program at the current size standard level. Depending on the level of small business participation, additional consideration may be given to the level of the current size standard and the analysis of industry factors.”104106 The SBA later announced in its Semiannual Regulatory Agenda, published on November 24, 2008, that it planned to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning size standards for Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and Other Services (NAICS Sector 81) in January 2009.105107 The SBA issued the notices for those industries on October 21, 2009.106108 In April 2009, the SBA announced that it was going to simplifywas simplifying the administration and use of its size size standards by reducing the number of receipt based size standards it used when establishing or approving aa new size standard or reviewing an existing size standard: For many years, SBA has been concerned about the complexity of determining small business status caused by a large number of varying receipts based size standards (see 69 FR 99 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Public Meetings on a Comprehensive Review of Small Business Size Standards,” 73 Federal Register 30440 - 30442, May 27, 2008. Other Services (NAICS Sector 81) include repair and maintenance, personal and laundry services, and religious, grantmaking, civic, professional, and similar organizations. 100 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Public Meetings on a Comprehensive Review of Small Business Size Standards,” 73 Federal Register 30441, May 27, 2008. 101 Ibid. 102 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Size Standards Comprehensive Review,” June 3, 2008, at http://archive.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/documents/adacct/june_3_public_presentation_rem.pdf. 103 Ibid. 104 Ibid. 105 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Administration Semiannual Regulatory Agenda,” 73 Federal Register 71449, 71450, November 24, 2008. 106 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 74 Federal Register 5392453940, October 21, 2009; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodation and Food Services Industries,” 74 Federal Register 53913-53924, October 21, 2009; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services Industries,” 74 Federal Register 53941-53954, October 21, 2009. Congressional Research Service 19 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 13130 (March 4, 2004) and 57 FR 62515 (December 31, 1992)). At the start of current comprehensive size standards review, there were 31 different levels of receipts based size standards. They ranged from $0.75 million to $35.5 million, and many of them applied to one or only a few industries. The SBA believes that to have so many different size standards with small variations among them is unnecessary and difficult to justify analytically. To simplify managing and using size standards, SBA proposes that there be fewer size standard levels. This will produce more common size standards for businesses operating in related industries. This will also result in greater consistency among the size standards for industries that have similar economic characteristics. Under the current comprehensive size standards review, SBA is proposing to establish eight “fixed-level” receipts based size standards: $5.0 million, $7.0 million, $10.0 million, $14.0 million, $19.0 million, $25.5 million, $30.0 million, and $35.5 million. These levels are established by taking into consideration the minimum, maximum and the most commonly used current receipts based size standards.107 The SBA also announced that “to simplify size standards further” it “may propose a common size standard for closely related industries.”10813130 (March 4, 2004) and 57 FR 62515 (December 31, 1992)). At the start of current comprehensive size standards review, there were 31 different levels of receipts based size standards. They ranged from $0.75 million to $35.5 million, and many of them applied to one or only a few industries. The SBA believes that to have so many different size standards with small variations among them is unnecessary and difficult to justify analytically. To simplify managing and using size standards, SBA proposes that there be fewer size standard levels. This will produce more common size standards for businesses operating in related industries. This will also result in greater consistency among the size standards for industries that have similar economic characteristics. Under the current comprehensive size standards review, SBA is proposing to establish eight “fixed-level” receipts based size standards: $5.0 million, $7.0 million, $10.0 million, $14.0 103 Ibid. SBA, “Size Standards Comprehensive Review,” June 3, 2008, at http://archive.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/ documents/adacct/june_3_public_presentation_rem.pdf. 105 Ibid. 106 Ibid. 107 SBA, “Small Business Administration Semiannual Regulatory Agenda,” 73 Federal Register 71449, 71450, November 24, 2008. 108 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 74 Federal Register 53924-53940, October 21, 2009; SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodation and Food Services Industries,” 74 Federal Register 53913-53924, October 21, 2009; and SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services Industries,” 74 Federal Register 5394153954, October 21, 2009. 104 Congressional Research Service 20 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues million, $19.0 million, $25.5 million, $30.0 million, and $35.5 million. These levels are established by taking into consideration the minimum, maximum and the most commonly used current receipts based size standards.109 The SBA also announced that it would use eight employee based size standards when establishing a new size standard or reviewing an existing size standard: 50 or fewer, 100 or fewer, 150 or fewer, 200 or fewer, 250 or fewer, 500 or fewer, 750 or fewer, and 1,000 or fewer employees.110 At that time, the SBA had seven employee based size standards: 50 or fewer, 100 or fewer, 150 or fewer, 500 or fewer, 750 or fewer, 1,000 or fewer, and 1,500 or fewer employees. The SBA stopped using the 1,500 or fewer employee size standard when establishing a new or reviewing an existing size standard, noting that only three manufacturing industries had a 1,500 or fewer employee size standard at that time.111 The SBA also announced that “to simplify size standards further” it “may propose a common size standard for closely related industries.”112 The SBA argued although the size standard analysis may support a separate size standard for each industry, SBA believes that establishing different size standards for closely related industries may not always be appropriate. For example, in cases where many of the same businesses operate in the same multiple industries, a common size standard for those industries might better reflect the Federal marketplace. This might also make size standards among related industries more consistent than separate size standards for each of those industries.109 Table 2 shows the eight fixed levels for receipts-based size standards and the eight fixed levels for its employee-based size standards that the SBA is currently applying when establishing or reviewing size standards under its ongoing review of its size standards. Table 2. Industry-Based Size Standard Levels Currently Being Applied During the SBA’s On-going Review of its Size Standards Receipts-Based Levels Employee-Based Levels $5.0 million 50 employees $7.0 million (anchor) 100 employees (wholesale anchor) $10.0 million 150 employees $14.0 million 200 employees $19.0 million 250 employees $25.5 million 500 employees (manufacturing anchor) $30.0 million 750 employees $35.5 million 1,000 employees 107 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, pp. 21, 22, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 108 Ibid., pp. 22- 23. 109 Ibid., p. 23. Congressional Research Service 20 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Source: U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, pp. 21-23, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. Notes: At the start of the current comprehensive size standards review which began in 2008, the SBA had 41 different size standards: number of employees (7 size standards), average annual receipts in the previous three years (31 size standards), average assets (1 size standard), annual megawatt hours of electric output in the preceding fiscal year (1 size standard), and a combination of number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity (1 size standard). It also currently has 11 other size standards for its financial and other programs. The final rules for Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and Other Services (NAICS Sector 81) were published in the Federal Register on October 6, 2010, with an effective date of November 5, 2010.110 The SBA increased size standards for 46 of the 76 industries in Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), 5 of the 15 industries in Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and 18 of the 47 industries in Other Services (NAICS Sector 81).111 The SBA’s analysis supported a decrease to the current size standards for 23 industries in Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), 7 industries in Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and 20 industries in Other Services (NAICS Sector 81). However, the SBA retained those size standards because “proposing to lower small business size standards would be inconsistent with its on-going effort to promote small business assistance under the Recovery Act.”112 The SBA has continued the practice of retaining size standards when the SBA’s economic analysis supports a decrease because “lowering small business size standards is not in the best interest of small businesses in the current economic environment” and would “run counter to what SBA and the federal government are doing to help small businesses and create jobs.”113 On April 26, 2010, the SBA announced that it planned to issue final size standard rules for Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) and Transportation and Warehousing (NAICS Sector 48-49) in August 2010.114 The SBA published a notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register concerning size standards Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) on March 16, 2011,115 and Transportation and 110 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 75 Federal Register 6159761604, October 6, 2010; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodations and Food Service Industries,” 75 Federal Register 61604-61609, October 6, 2010; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services,” 75 Federal Register 61591-61596, October 6, 2010. The final rule for the retail trade industries also converted the measure of size for new car dealers from annual receipts to number of employees. 111 Ibid. 112 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 75 Federal Register 61598, October 6, 2010; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodations and Food Service Industries,” 75 Federal Register 61605, October 6, 2010; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services,” 75 Federal Register 61592, October 6, 2010. 113 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing, and Hunting,” 77 Federal Register 55763, September 11, 2012. 114 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 75 Federal Register 21895, April 26, 2010; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodations and Food Service Industries,” 75 Federal Register 21895, April 26, 2010; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services,” 75 Federal Register 21895, April 26, 2010; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional Scientific and Technical Services,” 75 Federal Register 21893, April 26, 2010; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Transportation and Warehousing Industries,” 75 Federal Register 21894, April 26, 2010. 115 The proposed rule would have increased small business size standards for 35 industries and one sub-industry within the professional, scientific and technical services industries. The SBA estimated that about 9,450 additional firms would obtain small business status if the proposed rule became effective and the small business share of total industry (continued...) Congressional Research Service 21 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Warehousing (NAICS Sector 48-49) on May 13, 2011.116 The SBA issued the final size standard rule for Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) on February 10, 2012.117 It issued the final size standard rule for Transportation and Warehousing (NAICS Sector 48-49) on February 24, 2012.118 Congress Requires Periodic Size Standard Reviews As mentioned previously, P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, requires the SBA to conduct a detailed review of not less than one-third of the SBA’s industry size standards during the 18-month period beginning on the date of enactment (September 27, 2010) and during every 18-month period thereafter.119 The act directs the SBA to “make appropriate adjustments to the size standards” to reflect market conditions, and to report to the House Committee on Small Business and the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship and make publicly available “not later than 30 days” after the completion of each review information regarding the factors evaluated as part of each review, the criteria used for any revised size standard, and why the SBA did, or did not, adjust each size standard that was reviewed. The act also requires the SBA to ensure that each industry size standard is reviewed at least once every five years.120 On July 7, 2011, the SBA announced as part of its “comprehensive review of all small business size standards” that it was evaluating the size standards in six NAICS Sectors as follows: • Utilities (NAICS Sector 22); • Information (NAICS Sector 51); • Administrative and Support, Waste Management and Remediation Services (NAICS Sector 56); (...continued) 113 As mentioned previously, on September 10, 2014, the SBA applied a new employee based size standard (1,250 or fewer employees) and the 1,500 or fewer employee based size standard, which the SBA had stopped using in April 2009 when establishing new or reviewing existing size standards, in its proposed size standard rule for the Manufacturing sector (NAICS Sector 31-33). The new 1,250 or fewer employee based size standard will go into effect if it is included in the final size standard rule for the Manufacturing sector, which is expected to be issued in 2015.114 The SBA also announced its intention to eliminate its 150 or fewer employee based size standard in its proposed rule for industries with employee based size standards not part of the manufacturing, wholesale trade, and retail trade industries, which was issued on September 10, 2014.115 The 150 or fewer employee size standard is currently applied to a single sub-industry and will cease to exist if its removal is included in the final size standard rule for those industries, which is expected to be issued in 2015. Table 2 shows the 8 receipts based size standards and 10 employee based size standards that the SBA currently applies when establishing a new size standard or reviewing an existing size standard. 109 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, pp. 21, 22, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/ files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 110 Ibid., p. 23. 111 Ibid. 112 Ibid., pp. 22- 23. 113 Ibid., p. 23. 114 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards for Manufacturing,” 79 Federal Register 54150, September 10, 2014. 115 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Industries With Employee Based Size Standards Not Part of Manufacturing, Wholesale Trade, or Retail Trade,” 79 Federal Register 53647, September 10, 2014. Congressional Research Service 21 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Table 2. Industry Size Standards Being Applied During the SBA’s Ongoing Review of its Small Business Size Standards Receipts Based Levels Employee Based Levels $5.0 million or less 50 or fewer employees $7.0 million or less (anchor) 100 or fewer employees (wholesale anchor) $10.0 million or less 150 or fewer employeesa $14.0 million or less 200 or fewer employees $19.0 million or less 250 or fewer employees $25.5 million or less 500 or fewer employees (manufacturing anchor) $30.0 million or less 750 or fewer employees $35.5 million or less 1,000 or fewer employees 1,250 or fewer employeesb 1,500 or fewer employees Source: U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, pp. 21-23, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf; SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Industries With Employee Based Size Standards Not Part of Manufacturing, Wholesale Trade, or Retail Trade,” 79 Federal Register 53647, September 10, 2014; and SBA, “Small Business Size Standards for Manufacturing,” 79 Federal Register 54150, September 10, 2014. Notes: As of February 2, 2015, the SBA had 28 industry based size standards in effect. a. The SBA proposed to eliminate the 150 or fewer employee based size standard in its proposed size standard rule for industries with employee based size standards not part of the manufacturing, wholesale trade, and retail trade industries. The 150 or fewer employee based size standard will cease to exist if its removal is included in the final size standard rule for these industries, which is expected to be issued in 2015. See SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Industries With Employee Based Size Standards Not Part of Manufacturing, Wholesale Trade, or Retail Trade,” 79 Federal Register 53647, September 10, 2014. b. The SBA applied the new, 1,250 or fewer employee based size standard in its proposed rule for the Manufacturing sector. It will go into effect if it is included in the final size standard rule for the Manufacturing sector, which is expected to be issued in 2015. See SBA, “Small Business Size Standards for Manufacturing,” 79 Federal Register 54150, September 10, 2014. The SBA issued the final rules for size standards for the Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and Other Services (NAICS Sector 81) industries in the Federal Register on October 6, 2010, with an effective date of November 5, 2010.116 The SBA increased size standards for 46 of the 76 industries in Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), 5 of the 15 industries in Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), and 18 of the 47 industries in Other Services (NAICS Sector 81).117 The SBA’s analysis supported a decrease to the size standards for 23 industries in Retail Trade (NAICS Sector 44-45), 7 industries in Accommodations and Food Services (NAICS Sector 72), 116 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 75 Federal Register 61597-61604, October 6, 2010; SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodations and Food Service Industries,” 75 Federal Register 61604-61609, October 6, 2010; and SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services,” 75 Federal Register 61591-61596, October 6, 2010. The final rule for the retail trade industries also converted the measure of size for new car dealers from annual receipts to number of employees. 117 Ibid. Congressional Research Service 22 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues and 20 industries in Other Services (NAICS Sector 81). However, the SBA retained those size standards because “proposing to lower small business size standards would be inconsistent with its on-going effort to promote small business assistance under the Recovery Act.”118 The SBA has continued the practice of retaining size standards when the SBA’s economic analysis supports a decrease because “lowering small business size standards is not in the best interest of small businesses in the current economic environment” and would “run counter to what SBA and the federal government are doing to help small businesses and create jobs.”119 The SBA’s only exception to this practice is if lowering the size standard is necessary to exclude dominant firms from becoming eligible for SBA assistance. On April 26, 2010, the SBA announced that it planned to issue final size standard rules for Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) and Transportation and Warehousing (NAICS Sector 48-49) in August 2010.120 The SBA published a notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register concerning size standards Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) on March 16, 2011,121 and Transportation and Warehousing (NAICS Sector 48-49) on May 13, 2011.122 The SBA issued the final size standard rule for Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) on February 10, 2012.123 It issued the final size standard rule for Transportation and Warehousing (NAICS Sector 48-49) on February 24, 2012.124 118 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 75 Federal Register 61598, October 6, 2010; SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodations and Food Service Industries,” 75 Federal Register 61605, October 6, 2010; and SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services,” 75 Federal Register 61592, October 6, 2010. 119 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing, and Hunting,” 77 Federal Register 55763, September 11, 2012. 120 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Retail Trade,” 75 Federal Register 21895, April 26, 2010; U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Accommodations and Food Service Industries,” 75 Federal Register 21895, April 26, 2010; SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Other Services,” 75 Federal Register 21895, April 26, 2010; SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional Scientific and Technical Services,” 75 Federal Register 21893, April 26, 2010; and SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Transportation and Warehousing Industries,” 75 Federal Register 21894, April 26, 2010. 121 The proposed rule would have increased small business size standards for 35 industries and one sub-industry within the professional, scientific and technical services industries. The SBA estimated that about 9,450 additional firms would obtain small business status if the proposed rule became effective and the small business share of total industry receipts in those industries would increase from about 35% under the current size standards to 41%. The number of firms that would obtain eligibility under the proposed rule represents about 1.2% of the total number of firms in those industries defined as small under current standards. Also, the SBA’s analysis supported a decrease in the size standards in 14 industries and one sub-industry, but the SBA concluded that “lowering small business size standards is not in the best interests of small businesses under current economic conditions.” See U.S. Small Business AdministrationSBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional, Scientific and Technical Services,” 76 Federal Register 14323-14341, March 16, 2011. 116122 The proposed rule would have increased small business size standards for 22 industries within the transportation and warehousing industries. The SBA estimated that about 1,200 additional firms would obtain small business status if the proposed rule became effective and the small business share of total industry receipts in those industries would increase from about 36% under the current size standards to 39%. The number of firms that would obtain eligibility under the proposed rule represents about 0.7% of the total number of firms in those industries defined as small under current standards. Also, the SBA’s analysis supported a decrease in the size standards in 18 industries, but the SBA concluded that “lowering small business size standards is not in the best interests of small businesses under current economic conditions.” See U.S. Small Business AdministrationSBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Transportation and Warehousing,” 76 Federal Register 27935-279522793527952, May 13, 2011. 117 U.S. Small Business Administration123 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional, Technical, and Scientific Services,” 77 Federal Register 7490-751574907515, February 10, 2012. 118 U.S. Small Business Administration124 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Transportation and Warehousing,” 77 Federal Register 10943-10950, February 24, 2012. 119 P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Act of 2010, §1344. Updated Size Standards. 120 Ibid. Congressional Research Service 22 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues February 24, 2012. Congressional Research Service 23 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Congress Requires Periodic Size Standard Reviews As mentioned previously, P.L. 111-240 requires the SBA to conduct a detailed review of not less than one-third of the SBA’s industry size standards during the 18-month period beginning on the date of enactment (September 27, 2010) and during every 18-month period thereafter.125 The act directs the SBA to “make appropriate adjustments to the size standards” to reflect market conditions, and to report to the House Committee on Small Business and the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship and make publicly available “not later than 30 days” after the completion of each review information regarding the factors evaluated as part of each review, the criteria used for any revised size standard, and why the SBA did, or did not, adjust each size standard that was reviewed. The act also requires the SBA to ensure that each industry size standard is reviewed at least once every five years.126 On July 7, 2011, the SBA announced as part of its “comprehensive review of all small business size standards” that it was evaluating the size standards in six NAICS Sectors as follows: • Utilities (NAICS Sector 22); • Information (NAICS Sector 51); • Administrative and Support, Waste Management and Remediation Services (NAICS Sector 56); • Real Estate Rental and Leasing (NAICS Sector 53); • Educational Services (NAICS Sector 61); and • Health Care and Social Assistance Services (NAICS Sector 62).121127 The SBA also announced that once these reviews arewere complete that it anticipatesanticipated reviewing size standards in the following NAICS Sectors in this sequence: • Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation (NAICS Sector 71); • Construction (NAICS Sector 23); • Wholesale Trade (NAICS Sector 42); • Finance and Insurance (NAICS Sector 52); • Management of Companies (NAICS Sector 55); • Mining (NAICS Sector 21); • Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting (NAICS Sector 11); and • Manufacturing (NAICS Sector 31-33).122128 125 P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Act of 2010, §1344. Updated Size Standards. Ibid. 127 SBA, “Semiannual Regulatory Agenda,” 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011. 128 SBA, Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs, “Correspondence with the author,” March 30, 2012. 126 Congressional Research Service 24 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Table 3 provides the status of SBA industry size standard reviews since 2010. The table includes • the date the SBA published or anticipates to publish in the Federal Register a notice of intent to review the size standard; • the date the SBA published or anticipates to publish in the Federal Register a notice of proposed rulemaking for the size standard; • the recommended change proposed in the notice of proposed rulemaking; • the date the SBA published or anticipates to publish in the Federal Register the final rule for the size standard; and • the change that took place as a result of the final rule. 121 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Semiannual Regulatory Agenda,” 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011. 122 U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs, “Correspondence with the author,” March 30, 2012. Congressional Research Service 23 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Table 3. Status of SBA Size Standard Reviews, 2010-20132014 Notice of Intent to Review the Standard Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Recommended Change Final Rule Final Change Transportation and Warehousing (NAICS Sector 4849) 75 Federal Register 21894, Apr. 26, 2010 76 Federal Register 27935-27952, May 13, 2011 Would increase size standards for 22 industries 77 Federal Register 1094310950, Feb. 24, 2012 (effective Mar. 26, 2012) Increased size standards for 22 industries Professional, Scientific and Technical Services (NAICS Sector 54) 75 Federal Register 21893, 21894 Apr. 26, 2010 76 Federal Register 14323-14341, Mar. 16, 2011 Would increase size standards for 35 industries and 1 sub-industry 77 Federal Register 74887515, Feb. 10, 2012 (effective Mar. 12, 2012) Increased size standards for 34 industries and 3 subindustriesa Information (NAICS Sector 51) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 76 Federal Register 63216-63229, Oct. 12, 2011 Would increase size standards for 15 industries 77 Federal Register 7270272709, Dec. 6, 2012 (effective Jan. 7, 2013) Increased size standards for 15 industries Administrative and Support, Waste Management and Remediation Services (NAICS Sector 56) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 76 Federal Register 63510-63525, Oct. 12, 2011 Would increase size standards for 37 industries 77 Federal Register 7269172702, Dec. 6, 2012 (effective Jan. 7, 2013) Increased size standards for 37 industries NAICS Sectors Congressional Research Service 25 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues NAICS Sectors Notice of Intent to Review the Standard Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Recommended Change Final Rule Final Change Educational Services (NAICS Sector 61) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 76 Federal Register 70667-70680, Nov. 15, 2011 Would increase size standards for nine industries 77 Federal Register 5873958747, September 24, 2012 (effective Oct. 24, 2012) Increased size standards for nine industries NAICS Sectors Congressional Research Service 24 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues NAICS Sectors Notice of Intent to Review the Standard Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Real Estate, Rental and Leasing (NAICS Sector 53) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 Health Care and Social Assistance Services (NAICS Sector 62) Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation (NAICS Sector 71) Recommended Change Final Rule Final ChangeReal Estate, Rental and Leasing (NAICS Sector 53) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 76 Federal Register 70680-70694, Nov.15, 2011 Would increase size standards for 20 industries and 1 sub-industry 77 Federal Register 5874758755, September 24, 2012 (effective Oct. 24, 2012) Increased size standards for 21 industries and 1 subindustry Health Care and Social Assistance Services (NAICS Sector 62) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 77 Federal Register 11001-11017, Feb. 24, 2012 Would increase size standards for 28 industries 77 Federal Register 5875558761, September 24, 2012 (effective Oct. 24, 2012) Increased size standards for 28 industries Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation (NAICS Sector 71) 77 Federal Register 8024, February 13, 2012 77 Federal Register 42211-42225, July 18, 2012 Would increase size standards for 17 industries 78 Federal Register 3741737422, June 20, 2013 (effective July 22, 2013) Increased size standards for 17 industries (effective July 22, 2013) Construction (NAICS Sector 23) 77 Federal Register 8024, February 13, 2012 Congressional Research Service 77 Federal Register 42197-42211, July 18, 2012 Would increase size standards for one industry and one sub-industry 78 Federal Register 7733477343, Dec. 23, 2013 (effective Jan. 22, 2014) Increased size standards for one industry and one subindustry 25Congressional Research Service 26 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Notice of Intent to Review the Standard Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Utilities (NAICS Sector 22) 76 Federal Register 40140-40142, July 7, 2011 Finance and Insurance (NAICS Sector 52) Management of Companies (NAICS Sector 55) NAICS Sectors Recommended Change Final Rule Final Change 77 Federal Register 42441-42454, July 19, 2012 Would increase size standards for three industries and convert six industries from no more than 4 million megawatt hours in electric output in the preceding fiscal year to no more than 500 employees 78 Federal Register 7734377351, Dec. 23, 2013 (effective Jan. 22, 2014) Increased size standards for three industries and converted 10 industries from no more than 4 million megawatt hours in electric output in the preceding fiscal year to number of employees (varying by industry) NA 77 Federal Register 55737-55755, September, 11, 2012 Would increase size standards for 37 industries and change the measure of size from total assets to annual receipts for 1 industry 78 Federal Register 3740937417, June 20, 2013 (effective July 22, 2013) Increased size standards for 36 industries, and changed the measure of size from total assets to annual receipts for 1 industry NA 77 Federal Register 55737-55755, September, 11, 2012 Would increase size standards for two industries 78 Federal Register 3740937417, June 20, 2013 (effective July 22, 2013) Increased size standards for two industries Congressional Research Service 2627 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues NAICS Sectors Notice of Intent to Review the Standard Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Recommended Change Final Rule Final Change Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting (NAICS Sector 11) NA 77 Federal Register 55755-55768, September, 11, 2012 Would increase size standards for 11 industries 78 Federal Register 3739837404, June 20, 2013 (effective July 22, 2013) Increased size standards for 11 industries Support Activities for Mining (within NAICS Sector 21) NA 77 Federal Register 72766, December, 6, 2012 Would increase size standards for three industries 78 Federal Register 3740437408, June 20, 2013 (effective July 22, 2013) Increased size standards for three industries Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction (NAICS Sector 21) 78 Federal Register 1639, Jan. 8, 2013 cites 77 Federal Register 72766, December, 6, 2012 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Wholesale Trade (NAICS Sector 42) 78 Federal Register 1639, Jan. 8, 2013 Was expected in March 2013 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Manufacturing (NAICS Sector 3133) 78 Federal Register 1639, Jan. 8, 2013 Was expected in March 2013 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Other Industries with EmployeeBased Size Standards not Part of Manufacturing or Wholesale Trade (primarily within NAICS Sectors 51 and 54) 78 Federal Register 1639, Jan. 8, 2013 Was expected in March 2013 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Expected in 201479 Federal Register 28631-28647, May 19, 2014 Would increase size standards for 46 industries in NAICS Sector 42 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 Expected in 2014 and Retail Trade (two industries with employee based size standards within NAICS Sector 44-45) Manufacturing (NAICS Sector 3133) Would increase one industry in NAICS Sector 4445 78 Federal Register 1639, Jan. 8, 2013 79 Federal Register 54146-54177, September 10, 2014 Would increase size standards for 209 industries in NAICS Sector 3133 Would also increase the refining capacity component for Petroleum Refiners from no more than 125,000 barrels per calendar day to no more than 200,000 barrels per calendar day. Congressional Research Service 28 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues NAICS Sectors Industries with Employee Based Size Standards not Part of Manufacturing, Wholesale Trade, or Retail Trade (primarily within NAICS Sectors 51 and 54) Notice of Intent to Review the Standard Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 78 Federal Register 1639, Jan. 8, 2013 79 Federal Register 53646-53666, September 10, 2014 Recommended Change Would increase size standards for 30 industries and 3 sub-industries, and decrease size standards for 3 industries “to exclude dominant firms” Final Rule Expected in 2015 Final Change Expected in 2015 Source: Federal Register as cited in the table. a. Also increased one size standard (Computer and Office Machine Repair and Maintenance) in NAICS Sector 81, Other Services, thatwhich was not reviewed during the SBA’s review of that sector in 2010. SBA’s Definitions for Small Business The SBA, relying on statutory language, defines a small business as a concern that is organized for profit; has a place of business in the United States; operates primarily within the United States or makes a significant contribution to the economy through payment of taxes or use of American products, materials, or labor; is independently owned and operated; and is not dominant in its Congressional Research Service 27 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues field on a national basis. The business may be a sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, or any other legal form.123129 The SBA uses two measures to determine if a business is small: industry specific size standards or a combination of the business’s net worth and net income. For example, the SBA’s Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) program allows businesses to qualify as small if they meet the SBA’s size standard for the industry in which the applicant is primarily engaged, or an alternative net worth and net income based size standard which has been established for the SBIC program. The SBIC’s alternative size standard is currently set as a maximum net worth of not more than $1819.5 million and average after-tax net income for the preceding two years of not more than $6.5 million.124130 All of the company’s subsidiaries, parent companies, and affiliates are considered in determining if it meets the size standard. The SBA decided to apply the net worth and net income measures to the SBIC program “because investment companies evaluate businesses using these measures to decide whether or not to make an investment in them.”125 131 129 13 C.F.R. §121.105. Affiliations between businesses, or relationships allowing one party control or the power of control over another, generally count in size determinations. Businesses can thus be determined to be other than small because of their involvement in joint ventures, subcontracting arrangements, or franchise or license agreements, among other things, provided that their personnel numbers or income, plus those of their affiliate(s), are over the pertinent size threshold. 13 C.F.R. §121.103. For further analysis, see CRS Report R40744, The “8(a) Program” for Small Businesses Owned and Controlled by the Socially and Economically Disadvantaged: Legal Requirements and Issues, by Kate M. Manuel. 130 13 C.F.R. §107.700; 13 C.F.R. §107.710; 13 C.F.R. §301(c)(2); and 13 C.F.R. §301(c)(1). 131 SBA, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 8, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. Congressional Research Service 29 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Businesses participating in the SBA’s 504/Certified Development Company (504/CDC) loan guaranty program are to be deemed small if they did not have a tangible net worth in excess of $8.5 million and did not have an average net income in excess of $3 million after taxes for the preceding two years.126132 As discussed below, P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, increased these threshold amounts on an interim basis to not more than $15 million in tangible net worth and not more than $5 million in average net income after federal taxes for the two full fiscal years before the date of the application. All of the company’s subsidiaries, parent companies, and affiliates are considered in determining if it meets the size standard. Also, before May 5, 2009, businesses participating in the SBA’s 7(a) loan guaranty program, including its express programs, were deemed small if they met the SBA’s size standards for firms in the industries described in the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).127NAICS.133 Alternative Size Standards Using authority provided under P.L. 111-5, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the SBA temporarily applied the 504/CDC program’s size standards as an alternative for 7(a) loans approved from May 5, 2009, through September 30, 2010.128 Firms applying for a 7(a) 123 13 CFR §121.105. Affiliations between businesses, or relationships allowing one party control or the power of control over another, generally count in size determinations. Businesses can thus be determined to be other than small because of their involvement in joint ventures, subcontracting arrangements, or franchise or license agreements, among other things, provided that their personnel numbers or income, plus those of their affiliate(s), are over the pertinent size threshold. 13 CFR §121.103. For further analysis, see CRS Report R40744, The “8(a) Program” for Small Businesses Owned and Controlled by the Socially and Economically Disadvantaged: Legal Requirements and Issues, by Kate M. Manuel. 124 13 CFR §107.700; 13 CFR §107.710; 13 CFR §301(c)(2); and 13 CFR §301(c)(1). 125 U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 8, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 126 U.S. Small Business Administration, “SOP 50 10 5(C): Lender and Development Company Loan Programs,” (effective October 1, 2010), p. 266, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/serv_sops_50105c_loan_0.pdf; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “SOP 50 10 5(E): Lender and Development Company Loan Programs,” (effective June 1, 2012), p. 92, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/SOP%2050%2010%205(E)%20(6-272013)%20change%20of%20ownership%20eff%20date%207-1-13%20clean.pdf. 127 13 CFR §121.201. 128 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards; Temporary Alternative Size Standards for (continued...) Congressional Research Service 28 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 134 Firms applying for a 7(a) loan during that time period qualified as small using either the SBA’s industry size standards or the 504/CDC program’s size standard. The provision’s intent was to enhance the ability of small businesses to access the capital necessary to create and retain jobs during the economic recovery. P.L. 111-240 made the use of alternative size standards for the 7(a) program permanent. The act directs the SBA to establish an alternative size standard for both the 7(a) and 504/CDC programs that uses maximum tangible net worth and average net income as an alternative to the use of industry standards. The act also establishes, until the date on which the alternative size standard is established, an interim alternative size standard for the 7(a) and 504/CDC programs of not more than $15 million in tangible net worth and not more than $5 million in average net income after federal taxes (excluding any carry-over losses) for the two full fiscal years before the date of the application.129 Industry Size Standards The SBA administrator has the authority to establish and modify size standards for particular industries. At the start of the current review of comprehensive size standards which started in 2008, the SBA had 41 different size standards: number of employees (7 size standards, 8 slightly different ones under the new methodology); average annual receipts in the previous three years (31 size standards, 8 under the new methodology); average assets (1 size standard); annual megawatt hours of electric output in the preceding fiscal year (1 size standard); and a combination of number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity (1 size standard).130 Overall, the SBA currently classifies about 97% of all employer firms as small.131 These firms account for about 30% of industry receipts. (...continued) 7(a) Business Loan Program,” 74 Federal Register 20577, May 5, 2009. 129135 132 SBA, “SOP 50 10 5(C): Lender and Development Company Loan Programs,” (effective October 1, 2010), p. 266, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/serv_sops_50105c_loan_0.pdf; and SBA, “SOP 50 10 5(E): Lender and Development Company Loan Programs,” (effective June 1, 2012), p. 92, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/ SOP%2050%2010%205(E)%20(6-27-2013)%20change%20of%20ownership%20eff%20date%207-1-13%20clean.pdf. 133 13 C.F.R. §121.201. 134 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards; Temporary Alternative Size Standards for 7(a) Business Loan Program,” 74 Federal Register 20577, May 5, 2009. 135 P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Act of 2010, §1116. Alternative Size Standards. S. 3103, the Small Business Job Creation Act of 2010, introduced by then-Senator Olympia Snowe on March 10, 2010, and referred to the Senate Committee on Finance, and S. 2869, the Small Business Job Creation and Access to Capital Act of 2009, introduced by Senator Mary Landrieu on December 10, 2009, and reported favorably by the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, would have authorized the SBA to establish an alternative size standard for the SBA’s 7(a) and 504/CDC loan programs. Both bills would have used maximum tangible net worth of not more than $15 million and average net income after federal taxes of not more than $5 million for the two full fiscal years before the date of the application as an alternative to the use of the SBA’s industry size standards. Senator Snowe stated on the Senate floor, on December 10, 2009, that the proposed alternative size standard in S. 2869 would “help more small businesses meet the SBA’s requirements to access SBA-backed loans.” Senator Olympia Snowe, “Statements on Introduced Bills and Joint Resolutions,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 155, no. 185 (December 10, 2009), p. S12913. 130 13 CFR §121.102; 13 CFR §121.104; 13 CFR §121.106; and 13 CFR §121.201. Almost all industries have only one measure of size. A few industries use a combination of measures. For example, the petroleum refinery industry uses a combination of refining capacity and number of employees. Also, the number of employees of a concern is its average number of persons employed for each pay period over the concern’s latest 12 months. Any person on the payroll must be included as one employee regardless of hours worked or temporary status. Also, if a concern has not been in business for three years, the average weekly revenue for the number of weeks the concern has been in business is multiplied by 52 to determine its average annual receipts. 131 U.S. Small Business Administration, “SBA’s Size Standards Analysis: An Overview on Methodology and Comprehensive Size Standards Review,” power point presentation, Khem R. Sharma, SBA Office of Size Standards, July 13, 2011, p. 4, at http://www.actgov.org/sigcom/SIGs/SIGs/SBSIG/Documents/2011%20%20Documents%20and%20Presentations/Size%20Stds%20Presentation_SIG%20Meeting.pdf. Congressional Research Service 29 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Congressional Research Service 30 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Industry Size Standards The SBA administrator has the authority to establish and modify size standards for particular industries. Overall, the SBA currently classifies about 97% of all employer firms as small.136 These firms account for about 30% of industry receipts. The SBA generally “prefers to use average annual receipts as a size measure because it measures the value of output of a business and can be easily verified by business tax returns and financial records.”132137 However, historically, the SBA has used the number of employees to determine if manufacturing and mining companies are small. As a starting point, the SBA presumes $7.0 million as an appropriate size standard for the services, retail trade, construction, and other industries with receipts based size standards; 500 employees for the manufacturing, mining and other industries with employee based size standards; and 100 employees for the wholesale trade industries. These three levels, referred to as “anchor size standards,” are not minimum size standards, but rather benchmarks or starting points. To the extent an industry displays “differing industry characteristics,” a size standard higher, or in some cases lower, than an anchor size standard is supportable.133138 Before a proposed change to the size standards can take effect, the SBA’s Office of Size Standards (OSS) undertakes an analysis of the change’s likely impact on the affected industry, focusing on the industry’s overall degree of competition and the competitiveness of the firms within the industry. The analysis includes an assessment of the following five industry factors: average firm size, degree of competition within the industry, start-up costs and entry barriers, distribution of firms by size, and small business share in federal contracts.134139 The SBA also considers several other secondary factors “as they are relevant to the industries and the interests of small businesses, including technological change, competition among industries, industry growth trends, and impacts on SBA programs.”135140 Any changes to size standards must follow the rulemaking procedures of the Administrative Procedure Act. A proposed rule changing a size standard is first published in the Federal Register, allowing for public comment. It must include documentation establishing that a significant problem exists that requires a revision of the size standard, plus an economic analysis of the change. Comments from the public, plus any other new information, are reviewed and evaluated before a final rule is promulgated establishing a new size standard. The SBA uses employment size to determine eligibility for 509 industries, including all 364 manufacturing industries, 25 of 29 mining industries, and all 71 wholesale trade industries. Most manufacturing industries (247 of 364 classifications, or 67.9%) have an upper limit of 500 employees; some have an upper limit of 750 employees (53 of 364 classifications, or 14.6%); some have an upper limit of 1,000 employees (61 of 364 classifications, or 16.8%); and 3 (ammunition, except small arms, manufacturers, petroleum refineries, and aircraft manufacturers) have an upper limit of 1,500 employees.136 All 25 of the mining industries that use employment to 132 U.S. Small Business Administration 136 SBA, “SBA’s Size Standards Analysis: An Overview on Methodology and Comprehensive Size Standards Review,” power point presentation, Khem R. Sharma, SBA Office of Size Standards, July 13, 2011, p. 4, at http://www.actgov.org/sigcom/SIGs/SIGs/SBSIG/Documents/2011%20-%20Documents%20and%20Presentations/ Size%20Stds%20Presentation_SIG%20Meeting.pdf. 137 SBA, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 8, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 133138 Ibid., p. 1. SBA established 500 employees as the anchor size standard for the manufacturing industries at SBA’s inception in 1953, and shortly thereafter established a receipts based anchor size standard of $1 million in average annual receipts for the nonmanufacturing industries. The receipts based anchor size standard has been adjusted periodically for inflation. 134139 13 C.F.R. §121.102. 135 U.S. Small Business Administration140 SBA, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 1, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 136 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Table of Small Business Size Standards,” July 22, 2013, at http://www.sba.gov/content/table-small-business-size-standards. Congressional Research Service 30 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Congressional Research Service 31 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues The SBA currently uses employment size to determine eligibility for 509 industries, including all 364 manufacturing industries, 25 of 29 mining industries, and all 71 wholesale trade industries. Most manufacturing industries (247 of 364 classifications, or 67.9%) have an upper limit of 500 employees; some have an upper limit of 750 employees (53 of 364 classifications, or 14.6%); some have an upper limit of 1,000 employees (61 of 364 classifications, or 16.8%); and 3 (ammunition, except small arms, manufacturers, petroleum refineries, and aircraft manufacturers) have an upper limit of 1,500 employees.141 All 25 of the mining industries that use employment to determine eligibility have an upper limit of 500 employees. All 71 of the wholesale trades industries have an upper limit of 100 employees.137142 The SBA currently has eight different employee-based size standardsnine employee based industry size standards in effect (50 or fewer, 100 or fewer, 150 or fewer, 200 or fewer, 250 or fewer, 500 or fewer, 750 or fewer, 1,000 or fewer, and 1,500 or fewer employees) in 509 industries.138 Under the new methodology, the SBA will use the following eight slightly different employee-based size standards when establishing new, or reviewing existing, size standards: 50 or fewer, 100 or fewer, 150 or fewer, 200 or fewer, 250 or fewer, 500 or fewer, 750 or fewer, and 1,000 or fewer. employees). As mentioned earlier, the SBA has proposed adding a 1,250 or fewer employee based size standard and eliminating the 150 or fewer employee based size standard.143 The SBA uses average annual receipts over the three most recently completed fiscal years to determine program eligibility for most other industries (533 of 1,047 industries, or 50.9%).139144 The SBA also uses average asset size as reported in the firm’s four quarterly financial statements for the preceding year to determine eligibility for five finance industries, and a combination of number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity for petroleum refineries.140 As mentioned previously, at the start of the current comprehensive size standards review which began in 2008, the SBA had 31 different size limits using the firm’s average annual sales or receipts, ranging from no more than $0.75 million to no more than $35.5 million, to determine program eligibility in 538 industries. In some instances, 145 The SBA currently has 17 receipt based industry size standards in effect.146 In some instances, there is considerable variation in the size standards used within each industrial sector. For example, the SBA uses 10 different size standards to determine eligibility for 69 industries in the retail trade sector.141147 In general, • most administrative and support service industries have an upper limit of either $1415.0 million or $19.0 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most agricultural industries have an upper limit of $0.75 million in average annual sales or receipts;142 • most construction of buildings and civil engineering construction industries have an upper limit of $33.5 million in average annual sales or receipts, and most construction specialty trade contractors have an upper limit of $14.0 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most educational services industries have an upper limit of either $7.0 million or $10 million in average annual sales or receipts; 137 20.5 million in average annual sales or receipts; 141 SBA, “Table of Small Business Size Standards,” July 14, 2014, at http://www.sba.gov/content/table-small-businesssize-standards. 142 Ibid. Since 1986, all industries in the Wholesale Trade Sector have had the 100-employee size standard. For procurement purposes, the SBA’s size standard is 500 or fewer employees for all industries in both the Retail Trade and Wholesale Trade Sectors. 143 The 509 count of employee- based size standards includes the use of a combination of number of employees and barrel per day refining capacity for petroleum refineries. 139 Also, see SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Industries With Employee Based Size Standards Not Part of Manufacturing, Wholesale Trade, or Retail Trade,” 79 Federal Register 53647, September 10, 2014; and SBA, “Small Business Size Standards for Manufacturing,” 79 Federal Register 54150, September 10, 2014. 144 The annual receipts of a concern which has been in business for less than three complete fiscal years is determined by dividing the total receipts for the period the concern has been in business by the number of weeks in business, multiplied by 52. See 13 C.F.R. §121.104. 140 U.S. Small Business Administration145 SBA, “Table of Small Business Size Standards,” July 22, 2013, at 14, 2014, at http://www.sba.gov/content/table-small-business-size-standards. 141 Ibid. 142 P.L. 99-272, the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (Title XVIII, Section 18016) inserted a requirement that notwithstanding any other provision of law, an agricultural enterprise shall be deemed to be a small business concern if it, including its affiliates, has annual receipts not in excess of $500,000. P.L. 106-554, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2001 (Title VIII, Section 806(b)), substituted “$750,000” for “$500,000.” 138 Congressional Research Service 31 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues • most health care industries have an upper limit of either $7.0 million or $14.0 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most social assistance industries have an upper limit of $10businesssize-standards. 146 The 17 receipts based size standards currently in effect are: $0.75 million or less, $5.5 million or less, $7.5 million or less, $11.0 million or less, $15.0 million or less, $18.0 million or less, $19.0 million or less, $20.5 million or less, $25.0 million or less, $27.5 million or less, $29.5 million or less, $30.5 million or less, $32.0 million or less, $32.5 million or less, $36.5 million or less, $37.5 million or less, and $38.5 million or less. 147 Ibid. Congressional Research Service 32 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues • most agricultural industries have an upper limit of $0.75 million in average annual sales or receipts;148 • most construction of buildings and civil engineering construction industries have an upper limit of $36.5 million in average annual sales or receipts, and most construction specialty trade contractors have an upper limit of $15.0 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most educational services industries have an upper limit of either $7.5 million or $11 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most health care industries have an upper limit of either $7.5 million or $15.0 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most social assistance industries have an upper limit of $11.0 million in average annual sales or receipts; • most professional, scientific, and technical service industries have an upper limit of $1415.0 million in average annual sales or receipts, but range from $7.05 million to $3538.5 million; • there is considerable variation within the transportation and warehousing industrial sector (e.g., all 11 transit and ground passenger transportation industries have an upper limit of $1415.0 million in average annual sales or receipts, the 6 truck transportation and 4 transportation warehousing and storage industries have an upper limit of $2527.5 million in average annual sales or receipts, 7 transportation industries have an upper limit of 500 employees, 8 transportation industries have an upper limit of 1,500 employees, and the remaining industries in this sector have an upper limit ranging from $7.05 million to $3538.5 million in average annual sales or receipts); and • most finance and insurance industries have an upper limit of $3538.5 million in average annual sales or receipts. The SBA also applies a $500550 million average asset limit (as reported in the firm’s four quarterly financial statements for the preceding year) to determine eligibility in five finance industries: commercial banks, saving institutions, credit unions, other depository credit intermediation, and credit card issuing.143149 As mentioned previously, the SBA is currently using eight receipt- based size standards when establishing new or reviewing existing size standards. The SBA has argued that reducing the number of receipt- receipt based size standards, from 31 to 8, will simplify the management and use of size standards standards and provide “greater consistency in size standards among industries that are similar in their their economic characteristics.”144 The SBA’s decision to reduce the number of receipt-150 148 P.L. 99-272, the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (Title XVIII, Section 18016) inserted a requirement that notwithstanding any other provision of law, an agricultural enterprise shall be deemed to be a small business concern if it, including its affiliates, has annual receipts not in excess of $500,000. P.L. 106-554, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2001 (Title VIII, Section 806(b)), substituted “$750,000” for “$500,000.” 149 SBA, “Table of Small Business Size Standards,” July 14, 2014, at http://www.sba.gov/content/table-small-businesssize-standards. 150 SBA, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 22, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. Congressional Research Service 33 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues The SBA’s decision to reduce the number of receipt based size standards and to use a common size standard for closely related industries when establishing or approving industry size standards raised the possibility of establishing or approving a size standard that may not be directly supported by its economic assessment of that industrial classification. For example, in the final rule issued for Professional, Technical, and Scientific Services (Sector 54), on February 10, 2012, the SBA argued that “it should continue to maintain similar or comparable size standards among the surveying and mapping industries and the architectural and engineering service industries.”145151 As a result, although the industry data point to a size standard higher than $14 million for NAICS 541360 and lower than $14 million for NAICS 541370, SBA believes a common size 143 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Table of Small Business Size Standards,” July 22, 2013, at http://www.sba.gov/content/table-small-business-size-standards. 144 U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development, “SBA Size Standards Methodology,” April 2009, p. 22, at http://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/size_standards_methodology.pdf. 145 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional, Technical, and Scientific Services,” 77 Federal Register 7498, February 10, 2012. Congressional Research Service 32 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues standard of $14 million is more appropriate than establishing two very different size standards for the two very similar types of industries, because (1) it represents a significant increase to the current size standard, as the commenters desired and (2) it maintains the historical common size standard between mapping and surveying services and architecture and engineering services.146152 H.R. 3987, the Small Business Protection Act of 2012, introduced on February 8, 2012, and ordered to be reported by the House Committee on Small Business on March 21, 2012, addressed the SBA’s recent practice of combining size standards within industrial groups to promote greater consistency for industries that have similar economic characteristics. The bill would have authorized the SBA’s Administrator to “establish or approve a single size standard for a grouping of four digit North American Industrial Classification codes only if the Administrator makes publicly available, not later than the date on which such size standard is established or approved, a justification demonstrating that such size standard is appropriate for each individual industry classification included in the grouping.”147153 The bill would have required the SBA’s Administrator to provide a detailed description of the industry for which the new size standard is proposed; an analysis of the competitive environment for that industry; the approach the Administrator used to develop the proposed standard including the source of all data used to develop the proposed rulemaking; and the anticipated effect of the proposed rulemaking on the industry, including the number of concerns not currently considered small that would be considered small under the proposed rulemaking and the number of concerns currently considered small that would be deemed other than small under the proposed rulemaking.148154 P.L. 112-239, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, which became law on on January 2, 2013, included these provisions. The Senate’s version of the bill did not include these these provisions, but the conference report accompanying the bill (H.R. 4310), which was agreed to by the House on December 20, 2012, and by the Senate on December 21, 2012, included them. Other Federal Agency Size Standards Many federal statutes provide special considerations for small businesses. For example, small businesses are provided preferences through set-asides and sole source awards in federal contracting and pay lower fees to apply for patents and trademarks.149 In most instances, businesses are required to meet the SBA’s size standards to be considered a small business. However, in some cases, the underlying statute defines the eligibility criteria for defining a small 146 Ibid.151 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Professional, Technical, and Scientific Services,” 77 Federal Register 7498, February 10, 2012. 152 Ibid. 153 H.R. 3987, the Small Business Protection Act of 2012, Section 2, Small Business Concern Size Standards. 148 Ibid. 149 The federal government has a goal of awarding at least 23% of all small business eligible federal government procurement contracts to small businesses, including 5% for small disadvantaged businesses, 5% for women-owned small businesses, 3% for small businesses owned by service-disabled veterans, and 3% for small businesses located in a HUBZone. See U.S. General Services Administration, Federal Procurement Data System – Next Generation, “Small Business Goaling Reports,” at https://www.fpds.gov/fpdsng_cms/index.php/en/reports. For further information and analysis concerning federal contracting preferences for small businesses see CRS Report R41268, Small Business Administration HUBZone Program, by Robert Jay Dilger. 147 Congressional Research Service 33 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues 154 Ibid. Congressional Research Service 34 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Other Federal Agency Size Standards Many federal statutes provide special considerations for small businesses. For example, small businesses are provided preferences through set-asides and sole source awards in federal contracting and pay lower fees to apply for patents and trademarks.155 In most instances, businesses are required to meet the SBA’s size standards to be considered a small business. However, in some cases, the underlying statute defines the eligibility criteria for defining a small business. In other cases, the statute authorizes the implementing agency to make those determinations. Under current law, a federal agency that decides that it would like to exercise its authority to establish its own size standard through the federal rulemaking process is required to, among other things, (1) undertake an initial regulatory flexibility analysis to determine the potential impact of the proposed rule on small businesses, (2) transmit a copy of the initial regulatory flexibility analysis to the SBA’s Chief Counsel for Advocacy for comment, and (3) publish the agency’s response to any comments filed by the SBA’s Chief Counsel for Advocacy in response to the proposed rule and a detailed statement of any change made to the proposed rule in the final rule as a result of those comments.150156 In addition, the federal agency must provide public notice of the proposed rule and an opportunity for the public to comment on the proposed rule, typically through the publication of an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register and notification of interested small businesses and related organizations.151157 Also, prior to issuing the final rule, the federal agency must have the approval of the SBA’s Administrator.152158 Under current practice, the SBA’s Administrator, through the SBA’s Office of Size Standards, consults with the SBA’s Office of Advocacy prior to making a final decision concerning such requests.153159 The Office of Advocacy is an independent office within the SBA. During the 112th Congress, H.R. 585, the Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, was reported by the House Committee on Small Business on November 16, 2011, by a vote of 13 to 8. The bill would have retained the SBA’s Administrator’s authority to develop size standards for programs under the Small Business Act of 1953 (as amended) and the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (as amended). The Office of Chief Counsel for Advocacy would have assumed the SBA Administrator’s authority to approve or disapprove a size standard proposed by a federal agency if it deviates from the SBA’s size standards.154 Advocates of splitting the SBA Administrator’s small business size standards’ authority between the Office of Chief Counsel for Advocacy and the SBA’s Administrator argued that Should an agency wish to draft a regulation that adopts a size standard different from the one already adopted by the Administrator in regulations implementing the Small Business Act, 150 5 U.S.C. 601; 5 U.S.C. 603; and 5 U.S.C. 604. 15 U.S.C. 632. 152155 The federal government has a goal of awarding at least 23% of all small business eligible federal government procurement contracts to small businesses, including 5% for small disadvantaged businesses, 5% for women-owned small businesses, 3% for small businesses owned by service-disabled veterans, and 3% for small businesses located in a HUBZone. See U.S. General Services Administration, Federal Procurement Data System – Next Generation, “Small Business Goaling Reports,” at https://www.fpds.gov/fpdsng_cms/index.php/en/reports. For further information and analysis concerning federal contracting preferences for small businesses see CRS Report R41268, Small Business Administration HUBZone Program, by Robert Jay Dilger. 156 5 U.S.C. 601; 5 U.S.C. 603; and 5 U.S.C. 604. The SBA last published a list of size standards set by agencies other than the SBA in 1995. See SBA, “Small Business Size Standards,” 60 Federal Register 57988-57991, November 24, 1995. 157 15 U.S.C. 632. 158 Ibid. The SBA reports “that there have been approximately 25 requests by other agencies under the authority of amended §3 of the Small Business Act since the date of amendment in 1992.” See U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, report to accompany H.R. 585, 112th Cong., 2nd sess., November 16, 2011, H.Rept. 112-288 (Washington: GPO, 2011), p. 7. 153 Representative159 Rep. Sam Graves, “Full Committee Hearing, Lifting the Weight of Regulations: Growing Jobs By Reducing Reducing Regulatory Burdens (III. H.R. 585—Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011),” letter to House Committee Committee on Small Business, June 8, 2011, p. 44, at http://smbiz.house.gov/UploadedFiles/6-15_Memo.pdf; U.S. Congressional Congressional Budget Office, “Congressional Budget Office Cost Estimate: H.R. 585—Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011,” p. 2, at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/124xx/doc12449/hr585.pdf; and U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, report to accompany H.R. 585, 112th Cong., 2nd sess., November 16, 2011, H.Rept. 112-288 (Washington: GPO, 2011), pp. 6-8. Also, see 13 C.F.R §121.901-903. 154 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, “Congressional Budget Office Cost Estimate: H.R. 585—Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011,” p. 2, at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/124xx/doc12449/hr585.pdf; and H.Rept. 112288, the Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011. CBO has estimated that the Office of Advocacy would ultimately need 10 additional staff positions to implement its new authority; and that the bill would cost $6 million over the 2012-2016 period. 151 Congressional Research Service 34 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues §121.901-903. Congressional Research Service 35 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues to 8. The bill would have retained the SBA’s Administrator’s authority to approve or disapprove size standards for programs under the Small Business Act of 1953 (as amended) and the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (as amended). The Office of Chief Counsel for Advocacy would have assumed the SBA Administrator’s authority to approve or disapprove size standards for purposes of any other act.160 During the 113th Congress, legislative language providing the Office of Chief Counsel for Advocacy authority to approve or disapprove size standards for purposes other than the Small Business Act of 1953 (as amended) and the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (as amended) was included in H.R. 4, the Jobs for America Act, a comprehensive jobs bill that was introduced and referred to several committees, including the Committee on Small Business, on September 15, 2014. The bill was passed by the House on September 18, 2014, by a vote of 227-193 (see H.Res. 727). During the 114th Congress, H.R. 527, the Small Business Regulatory Flexibility Improvements Act of 2015, would, among other provisions, authorize the SBA’s Office of Chief Counsel for Advocacy to approve or disapprove a size standard requested by a federal agency for purposes other than the Small Business Act or the Small Business Investment Act of 1958. The bill was reported by the House Committee on the Judiciary on January 27, 2015, by a vote of 19-8. Advocates of splitting the SBA Administrator’s small business size standards’ authority between the Office of Chief Counsel for Advocacy and the SBA’s Administrator have argued that Should an agency wish to draft a regulation that adopts a size standard different from the one already adopted by the Administrator in regulations implementing the Small Business Act, the agency must obtain approval of the Administrator. However, that requires the Administrator to have a complete understanding of the regulatory regime of that other act— knowledge usually outside the expertise of the SBA. However, the Office of the Chief Counsel for Advocacy, an independent office within the SBA, represents the interests of small businesses in rulemaking proceedings (as part of its responsibility to monitor agency compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-12, (RFA)) does have such expertise. Therefore, it is logical to transfer the limited function on determining size standards of small businesses for purposes other than the Small Business Act and Small Business Investment Act of 1958 to the Office of the Chief Counsel for Advocacy…. the Administrator is not the proper official to determine size standards for purposes of other agencies’ regulatory activities. The Administrator is not fluent with the vast array of federal regulatory programs, is not in constant communication with small entities that might be affected by another federal agency’s regulatory regime, and does not have the analytical expertise to assess the regulatory impact of a particular size standard on small entities. Furthermore, the Administrator’s standards are: very inclusive, not developed to comport with other agencies’ regulatory regimes, and lack sufficient granularity to examine the impact of a proposed rule on a spectrum of small businesses.155 Opponents 161 160 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, “Congressional Budget Office Cost Estimate: H.R. 585—Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011,” p. 2, at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/124xx/doc12449/hr585.pdf; and H.Rept. 112288, the Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011. CBO has estimated that the Office of Advocacy would ultimately need 10 additional staff positions to implement its new authority; and that the bill would cost $6 million over the 2012-2016 period. 161 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, report to accompany H.R. 585, 112th Cong., 2nd sess., November 16, 2011, H.Rept. 112-288 (Washington: GPO, 2011), p. 6. Congressional Research Service 36 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Opponents have argued that When an agency is seeking to use a size standard other than those approved by the SBA, the agency may consult with the Office of Advocacy. Such consultation is sensible, as the Office of Advocacy has significant knowledge of the regulatory environment outside of the canon of SBA law. However, the SBA’s Office of Size Standards, with its historical involvement, expertise, and staff resources in this area, remains the appropriate entity to approve such size standards…. While the legislation permits the SBA to continue to approve size standards for its enabling statutes, it removes SBA’s authority to do so for other statutes. The result would be to create a duplicate size standard authority in both the SBA and the Office of Advocacy. Both the SBA and the Office of Advocacy would have personnel who would analyze and evaluate size standards. Through the bifurcation of these responsibilities, taxpayers would effectively be forgoing the economies of scale that are currently enjoyed by the operation of a single Office of Size Standards in the SBA…. Having two such entities that have the same mission is not a transfer of function, but an inefficient and duplicative reorganization.… Instead of having one central office, there will now be two—further muddling small businesses’ relationship with the federal government.156162 Congressional Policy Options Historically, the SBA has relied on economic analysis of market conditions within each industry to define eligibility for small business assistance. On several occasions in its history, the SBA attempted to revise its small business size standards in a comprehensive manner. However, because (1) the Small Business Act provides leeway in how the SBA is to define small business; 155 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Small Business Size Standard Flexibility Act of 2011, report to accompany H.R. 585, 112th Cong., 2nd sess., November 16, 2011, H.Rept. 112-288 (Washington: GPO, 2011), p. 6. 156 Ibid., p. 14. Congressional Research Service 35 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues (2) there is no consensus on the economic factors that should be used in defining small business; (3) federal agencies have generally opposed size standards that might adversely affect their pool of available small business contractors; and (4) the SBA’s initial size standards provided program eligibility to nearly all businesses, the SBA’s efforts to undertake a comprehensive reassessment of its size standards met with resistance. Firms that might lose eligibility objected. Federal agencies also objected. As a result, in each instance, the SBA’s comprehensive revisions were not fully implemented. It remains to be seen how the requirement to conduct a detailed review of at least one-third of the SBA’s industry size standards every 18 months, which was imposed by P.L. 111-240, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, will affect the SBA’s current, ongoing review of each NAICS Sector in a sequential fashion. For example, the SBA may find it necessary to increase the number of OSS staff to meet the new requirement. In the meantime, the SBA continues to adjust its monetaryreceipts based size standards for inflation at least least once every five years, or more frequently if inflationary circumstances warrant, to prevent firms firms from losing their small business eligibility solely due to the effects of inflation. The last adjustment for inflation took place in 2008.157 The SBA also continues to review size standards within specific most recent adjustment for inflation took place on July 14, 2014.163 Prior to that, the last adjustment for 162 Ibid., p. 14. SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Monetary Size Standards,” 79 Federal Register 33647-33669, June 12, 2014. 163 Congressional Research Service 37 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues inflation took place in 2008.164 The SBA also continues to review size standards within specific industries whenever it determines that market conditions within that industry have changed. Congress has several options related to the SBA’s ongoing review of its size standards. For example, as part of its oversight of the SBA, Congress can wait for the agency to issue its proposed rule before providing input or establish a dialogue with the agency, either at the staff level or with Members involved directly, prior to the issuance of its proposed rule. Historically, Congress has tended to wait for the SBA to issue proposed rules concerning its size standards before providing input, essentially deferring to the agency’s expertise in the technical and methodological issues involved in determining where to draw the line between small and large firms. Congress has then tended to respond to the SBA’s proposed rules concerning its size standards after taking into consideration current economic conditions and input received from the SBA and affected industries. Waiting for the SBA to issue its proposed rule concerning its size standards before providing congressional input has both advantages and disadvantages. It provides the advantage of insulating the proposed rule from charges that it is influenced by political factors. It also has the advantage of respecting the separation of powers and responsibilities of the executive and legislative branches. However, it has the disadvantage of heightening the prospects for miscommunication, false expectations, and wasted effort, as evidenced by past proposed rules concerning the SBA’s size standards that were either rejected outright, or withdrawn, after facing congressional opposition. Another policy option that has not received much congressional attention in recent years, but which Congress may choose to address, is the targeting of the SBA’s resources. When the SBA reviews its size standards, it focuses on the competitive nature of the industry under review, with the goal of removing eligibility of firms that are considered large, or dominant, in that industry. There has been relatively little discussion of the costs and benefits of undertaking those reviews 157 U.S. Small Business Administration, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Size Standards, Business Loan Programs, and Disaster Assistance Program,” 73 Federal Register 41237-41254, July 18, 2008. Congressional Research Service 36 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues with the goal of targeting SBA resources to small businesses that are struggling to remain competitive. GAO recommended this approach in 1978 and Roger Rosenberger, then SBA’s associate administrator for policy, planning, and budgeting, testified at a congressional hearing in 1979 that it was debatable whether the SBA should provide any assistance to any of the businesses within industries where “smaller firms are flourishing.”158165 Revising the SBA’s size standards using this more targeted approach would likely reduce the number of firms eligible for assistance. It would also present the possibility of increasing available benefits to eligible small firms in those industries deemed “mixed” or “concentrated” by the SBA without necessarily increasing overall program costs. Perhaps because previous proposals that would result in a reduction in the number of firms eligible for assistance have met with resistance, this alternative approach to determining program eligibility has not received serious consideration in recent years. Nonetheless, it remains an option available to Congress should it decide to change current policy. Author Contact Information Robert Jay Dilger Senior Specialist in American National Government rdilger@crs.loc.gov, 7-3110 158 164 SBA, “Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Size Standards, Business Loan Programs, and Disaster Assistance Program,” 73 Federal Register 41237-41254, July 18, 2008. 165 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on General Oversight and Minority Enterprise, Size Standards for Small Business, hearing, 96th Cong., 1st sess., July 10, 1979 (Washington: GPO, 1979), p. 28. Congressional Research Service 3738 Small Business Size Standards: A Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues Author Contact Information Robert Jay Dilger Senior Specialist in American National Government rdilger@crs.loc.gov, 7-3110 Congressional Research Service 39