'This is ridiculous': Small-business owners can't get loans as shutdown enters Day 20.
David Fahrenthold RetweetedWaPos ace financial team @byHeatherLong @davidjlynch @renaemerle on how a lengthy gov #shutdown is already hurting small businesses & farms that cant get loans, exporters that cant ship products overseas, & other econ impacts
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This is ridiculous: Small-business owners cant get loans as shutdown enters Day 20.
By Heather Long, David J. Lynch and Renae Merle
January 10 at 6:00 AM
Brooks Troxler is a small-business owner in North Carolina whos known as Trox the tech for his ability to fix any computer problem. Business is growing and he had big plans to start 2019 by cutting the ribbon on a new property, but the partial U.S. government shutdown means he cant finish the purchase.
The Small Business Administration stopped processing new loans on Dec. 22. Troxler and thousands of others cant get their SBA loans approved, meaning they cant get money they need to start or expand their companies.
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If Troxler doesnt get the $550,000 loan soon, he wont be able to buy his dream commercial property an acre on a heavily traveled road a major upgrade from the small space he leases now. Hell also lose all the money he has sunk into appraisals, paperwork, fees and environmental assessments in the past few months to make this deal happen.
Im praying this shutdown ends quickly, said Troxler, who employs seven people at Trox Tech in Charlotte. We were 99 percent done. We were at the finish line, and now its like they pulled me back.
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Heather Long is an economics correspondent. Before joining The Washington Post, she was a senior economics reporter at CNN and a columnist and deputy editor at the Patriot-News in Harrisburg, Pa. She also worked at an investment firm in London. Follow https://twitter.com/byHeatherLong
David J. Lynch is a staff writer on the financial desk who joined The Washington Post in November 2017 after working for the Financial Times, Bloomberg News and USA Today. Follow https://twitter.com/davidjlynch
Renae Merle covers white-collar crime and Wall Street for The Washington Post. She has also worked for the Wall Street Journal and the Associated Press. Follow https://twitter.com/renaemerle
JayhawkSD
(3,163 posts)I think this shows how overly dependent business is on the government. I owned my own business for twenty years, got several loans, a couple of which were for expansion, and the government was involved in none of them. My business was sufficiently sound and my business acumen sufficiently documented that the bank was willing to lend to me without having to have the government involved.
Small business loans are made to businesses who don't really qualify. The bank won't lend until the government orders them to do so, and guarantees payment when the borrower defaults. Not sure that's of real benefit to our economy. Sure, it creates some jobs, but it has businesses running that are run by people who are not really qualified to run them.
duforsure
(11,885 posts)Before its done this will hurt many, many millions of people from trumps and the republicans staged PR stunt to shutdown the government over a falsely claimed crisis, and when trump hires illegals intentionally , and providing green cards to them, and no background checks on them. It shows how he's intentionally lying about a crisis. If its a crisis why is he hiring them, and without background checks and illegally provides them fake green cards.