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Does Trump Hate Small Business?

budget cuts
Does President Donald Trump hate small business? If you examine his proposed budget for 2021, that’s the logical conclusion to reach.

Trump is proposing to eliminate or drastically cut aid for small businesses—even when such cuts result in insignificant savings. Trump’s draconian recommended budget cuts would stifle the health and growth of this critical sector of our economy.

Presidential budgets rarely get enacted as proposed, but they are widely seen as reflecting a President’s priorities and values. Taking a look at Trump’s 2021 proposed budget, there’s a clear message to the small businesses of America—whether in blue states or red states: “I’m just not that into you.”

In 2017, Trump proposed—and got enacted—sweeping tax changes, significantly reducing taxes on large corporations and the super-rich. Those tax reductions resulted in huge deficits, increasing the national debt. Trump needs to show that he’s doing something to help pay for his tax giveaways.

Now, you need to understand the scope of the federal budget. The 2021 fiscal year budget is $4.8 Trillion. That’s trillion. America’s national debt is $22 Trillion. Shaving off a few million dollars from a very small program does virtually nothing to reduce the debt. But those programs might help hundreds of thousands of small businesses.

Trump targeted a large number of very low-cost small business programs for elimination or drastic cuts in his budget. Make no mistake: these cuts will make virtually no impact on the debt caused by Trump’s tax cuts. Rather, they reflect the values of a President who just doesn’t care about small business.

“President Trump made clear his interest in serving Wall Street over Main Street when his Administration enacted a corporate tax giveaway,” said House Small Business Committee Chairperson Nydia Velazquez. “Now as the deficit balloons, the President is further turning his back on hardworking Americans with a budget that cuts the Small Business Administration, slashes rural support programs, and eliminates economic development programs.”

Take a look at what Trump’s budget would do to mutilate small business programs:

Remember, in Trump’s 2017 tax bill, he provided permanent tax cuts to huge corporations, but the limited tax breaks for some “pass through” small businesses expire in 2025. This means that while fat cats are still getting tax reductions, you and I will be paying higher taxes. And it reflects Trump’s limited commitment to small business owners.

These cuts save the federal government a ridiculously low amount—what someone once called ‘budget dust’—so cutting their budgets means little. It’s just Donald Trump saying to small businesses: “take a hike.”


Copyright Rhonda Abrams, 2020

This article originally ran in USA Today on February 26, 2020

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