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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EDT
July 12, 2010

Restoring the Flow of Credit to Small Businesses

Remarks by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Federal Reserve Meeting Series:
“Addressing the Financing Needs of Small Businesses”

Washington, D.C.

July 12, 2010

Let me begin by thanking the staff of the Board’s Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, especially the Division’s director Sandra Braunstein, for the hard
work they have done to prepare for today’s discussion about improving access to credit
for sound small businesses. And thanks also to the many partners who helped us
organize today’s event, particularly the Small Business Administration and the
Treasury’s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund. I am pleased to
welcome all of you to the Federal Reserve Board.
This gathering, “Addressing the Financing Needs of Small Businesses,” serves as
a capstone for a series of more than 40 meetings. They were conducted across the
country, starting in February, by the Federal Reserve System’s community affairs offices.
These meetings provided forums for small business owners; trade associations; lenders;
bank supervisors; federal, state, and local government officials; and other stakeholders to
exchange ideas about the challenges facing small businesses, both in the near term and in
the longer run.
Some of these meetings were small-group discussions, while others were larger
sessions that addressed specific topics, such as minority entrepreneurship or guaranteed
loan programs. For example, I attended a meeting in Detroit that combined a general
discussion of small business credit issues with a session focusing on the specific case of
suppliers to the auto industry, many of which are small or medium-sized firms.
Participants in that session highlighted the interconnectedness of the auto supply chain
and the crucial role of stable financing for small businesses ranging from parts suppliers
to independent automobile dealers in the recovery of the auto industry as a whole. This
was, of course, just one meeting in one city. A meeting in Miami focused on the needs of

-2Hispanic-owned businesses. Similarly informative discussions took place in cities such
as New York, San Francisco, and Chicago, among many others, including Omaha,
Nebraska; Morgantown, West Virginia; Toledo, Ohio; and Little Rock, Arkansas.
Our objective in organizing this series was to gather information that we and
others can use to help develop policies that will support the flow of loans to creditworthy
small businesses--for instance, by identifying and addressing specific credit gaps or
impediments to lending or improving the access of small businesses to critical support
services, including assistance in filing loan applications. This information serves as the
basis for today’s discussion of the next steps that policymakers and stakeholders can
undertake to ensure that small businesses are able to participate in and contribute to the
economic recovery.
Before we get to the next steps, however, I would like to provide context by
briefly discussing the importance of small businesses to job creation and the economic
recovery, reviewing the actions that the Federal Reserve has taken to support small
business financing, and offering some observations about what we heard during this
small business meeting series.
Small businesses are central to creating jobs in our economy; they employ
roughly one-half of all Americans and account for about 60 percent of gross job
creation.1 Newer small businesses, those less than two years old, are especially
important: Over the past 20 years, these start-up enterprises accounted for roughly one-

1

Small businesses are defined here as firms with fewer than 500 employees.

-3quarter of gross job creation even though they employed less than 10 percent of the
workforce.2
The formation and growth of small businesses depends critically on access to
credit. Unfortunately, those businesses report that credit conditions remain very difficult.
For example, the net percentage of survey respondents telling the National Federation of
Independent Business that credit conditions have tightened over the prior three months
has remained extremely elevated by historical standards.3 And one measure of banks’
loans to small businesses dropped from more than $710 billion in the second quarter of
2008 to less than $670 billion in the first quarter of 2010.4 An important but difficult-toanswer question is, How much of this reduction has been driven by weaker demand for
loans from small businesses, how much by a deterioration in the financial condition of
small businesses during the economic downturn, and how much by restricted credit
availability? No doubt all three factors have played a role.5 Clearly, though, to support
the recovery, we need to find ways to ensure that creditworthy borrowers have access to
needed loans.
Over the past two years, the Federal Reserve and other agencies have made a
concerted effort to stabilize our financial system and our economy. These efforts,
importantly, have included working to facilitate the flow of credit to viable small
2

See John Haltiwanger, Ron S. Jarmin, and Javier Miranda (2010), “Who Creates Jobs? Small vs. Large
vs. Young,” working paper (February); and the U.S. Census Bureau’s Business Dynamics Statistics
database for statistics on job creation for new and small businesses (www.ces.census.gov/index.php/bds).
3
William C. Dunkelberg and Holly Wade (2010), NFIB Small Business Economic Trends (Nashville:
NFIB Research Foundation, June), www.nfib.com/Portals/0/PDF/sbet/sbet201006.pdf.
4
Data are from the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income (Call Report), where loans to small businesses, as stated in the reporting forms
FFIEC 031 and 041, schedule RC-C, part II, are defined as loans with original amounts of $1 million or
less that are secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties or are commercial and industrial loans.
Correction: On July 27, 2010, this footnote was revised to remove "plus loans with original balances of
$500,000 or less that are secured by farmland or are for agricultural production."
5
Charge-offs have also contributed to the decline in outstanding credit.

-4businesses. At the Federal Reserve, we helped bring capital from the securities markets
to small businesses through the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility--the TALF
program. More than 850,000 small business loans were financed in part by securities
whose issuance was supported by TALF. We have also been focused on strengthening
the nation’s banks, so that they can resume normal lending as quickly as possible. For
example, the stress tests that we conducted last year helped restore confidence in the
banking system, allowing banks to raise the capital they need to help offset credit losses
and, ultimately, to provide the basis for new lending.
We have heard the often-expressed concern that bank examiners have prevented
banks from making good loans. We take this issue very seriously. The Federal Reserve
has worked assiduously with the other banking regulators to develop interagency policy
statements on this issue, aimed at both banks and examiners. Our message is clear:
Consistent with maintaining appropriately prudent standards, lenders should do all they
can to meet the needs of creditworthy borrowers.6 Doing so is good for the borrower,
good for the lender, and good for our economy. To ensure that this message is being
heard and acted upon, we have conducted extensive training programs for our bank
examiners as well as outreach with bankers, and we will continue to seek feedback from
bankers and borrowers.
Though we believe that our and others’ efforts are making a difference, we also
know more must be done, and that additional effective action requires hearing firsthand
from knowledgeable people who can speak from diverse perspectives about the
6

For example, see Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, National Credit Union Administration, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Office of
Thrift Supervision, and Conference of State Bank Supervisors (2010), “Regulators Issue Statement on
Lending to Creditworthy Small Businesses,” joint press release, February 5,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20100205a.htm.

-5challenges facing small businesses. The insights we obtained from small business
owners, lenders, and others in this series of meetings have given us a more nuanced
understanding of the problem and will help us identify areas where we might be able to
do more. Not surprisingly, these meetings confirmed that facilitating small business
financing is not a simple or straightforward matter. Notably, the term “small business”
encompasses a heterogeneous mix of enterprises, ranging from pizzerias to start-up
technology firms, and each small business faces a unique combination of local economic
conditions and complex relationships with customers, suppliers, and creditors. Hence we
should be wary of one-size-fits-all solutions.
One of the most important themes underscored during the meetings is that solving
the issues faced by small businesses will require collaboration. The meeting series itself
served as a model of collaboration, interactive discussion, and cooperative problem
solving. Participants included community affairs officers, bank supervisors, economists,
and policymakers from the Federal Reserve. We involved our fellow bank regulators, the
Small Business Administration, and the Community Development Financial Institutions
Fund. And, of course, small businesses and lenders played a central role. The meetings
fostered stimulating conversations. Lenders heard from small business owners about
their frustrations over tightened credit. Likewise, lenders were able to explain the
considerations that go into making a small business loan. And regulators heard, in detail,
concerns expressed about the effect their procedures and guidance would have on small
business lending.
Some common themes emerged from the sessions. Business owners frequently
noted that the declining value of real estate and other collateral securing their loans poses

-6a particularly severe challenge. As one business owner at the Detroit meeting I attended
put it, “If you thought housing had declined in value, take a look at what equipment is
worth.” Business owners cited credit lines and working capital as their most critical
financial needs, followed by refinancing products that would permit them to take
advantage of low interest rates. Many reported having had to resort to borrowing through
their personal credit cards or from their retirement accounts. Several mentioned the need
for small-value loans in amounts less than $200,000 as well as the need for “patient
capital” from investors willing to commit funds for 5 to 10 years without an expectation
of immediate returns.
Some of the lenders that participated in our meetings expressed the view that
current lending conditions don’t represent credit tightening as much as a return to more
traditional underwriting standards following a period of too-lax standards. But, though
some lenders said they were emphasizing cash flow and relying less on collateral values
in evaluating creditworthiness, it seems clear that some creditworthy businesses-including some whose collateral has lost value but whose cash flows remain strong--have
had difficulty obtaining the credit that they need to expand, and in some cases, even to
continue operating. The challenge ahead for lenders will be to determine how to assess
the credit quality of businesses in an uncertain and difficult economic environment. It is
in lenders’ interest, after all, to lend to creditworthy borrowers; ultimately, that’s how
they earn their profits. Regulators, for their part, need to continue to work with lenders to
help them do all that they prudently can to meet the needs of creditworthy small
businesses.
Making credit accessible to sound small businesses is crucial to our economic

-7recovery and so should be front and center among our current policy challenges. We are
pleased that you have accepted our invitation to participate in today’s discussion of next
steps in the effort to promote small business finance. You each bring valuable insights
and perspectives to this issue, and I would like to thank you all for your willingness to
share your ideas.