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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo at
White House Roundtable on Small Business Reforms to Expand
Access to Capital
January 24, 2023

WASHINGTON – Today, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo participated in a White
House roundtable focused on how to best achieve the Administration’s goal of expanding access
to capital for small businesses. This discussion included a focus on Treasury’s historic
investments to support and strengthen Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs).

As Prepared for Delivery
Thank you, Brian, for inviting me to join you today. It’s wonderful to see the group represented
here today—from CDFIs that provide essential capital to those who need it most, to companies
on the cutting edge of financial technology, to leaders in small business policy.
You’ll hear more from her about these policies in a moment, but I also want to congratulate
Administrator Guzman on the steps the SBA is taking to increase access to capital. These rule
changes will make it easier for institutions that we know have a track record of reaching
underserved communities—like CDFIs—to expand their reach and impact.
At the Treasury, we share these goals and are pursuing a number of policies that will work in
tandem with the SBA’s actions to achieve them. In fact, Treasury sits alongside the SBA on the
Interagency Community Investment Committee (ICIC), a coordinating body announced by Vice
President Harris last summer.
The ICIC offers a forum for agencies that share common objectives related to community
investment to identify opportunities to collaborate—by aligning program operations and
procedures, finding ways to layer capital and deepen the impact of our investments, and help
ensure federal dollars go further to achieve these goals.
While the ICIC is new, the close relationship between our agencies and our work is not. Over the
past two years, Treasury has made a number of historic investments to support minority
depository institutions and CDFIs—institutions that create opportunity for underserved
communities and act as critical conduits for both our efforts and the SBA’s.

Last year, Treasury closed and funded over $8.3 billion of investment in depository CDFIs and
MDIs under the Emergency Capital Investment program, to support these institutions’ ability to
provide loans, grants, and other assistance to their borrowers, including small businesses—
especially minority-owned businesses and those in communities that struggled during the
pandemic.
Treasury has also led the implementation of key parts of the American Rescue Plan like the State
Small Business Credit Initiative, which provides nearly $10 billion to support entrepreneurial
ecosystems around the country. This includes $2.5 billion in funding and incentives to support
underserved businesses, as well as $500 million in technical assistance funding that we will
deliver in partnership with the Minority Business Development Agency at the Department of
Commerce.
This ethos of collaboration runs deep within the Biden-Harris Administration and in our efforts
to engage organizations like those gathered today. Since the Vice President announced its
formation in July, we’ve worked closely with the Economic Opportunity Coalition, a group of
nearly 30 leading companies and foundations, to find ways for the public, private, and social
sectors to work together on these issues.
We look forward to taking further steps at the Treasury and to supporting the actions the SBA is
taking today to support America’s small businesses. Thank you again. With that, let me turn it to
Gene Sperling.
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