Answer:
When you hear the words “small business lender”, you may imagine a calculator-clutching community banker who spends his time carefully scrutinizing entrepreneur’s financial statements. But increasingly these days that’s anachronistic. Banks have moved from being community-focused to being Fed-focused, and small business lending is less of a priority. That’s why if you talk to any small business owner about the biggest obstacles to their growth, it won’t take long for the conversation to turn to capital access.
In fact, about 80 percent of small business owners who apply for a bank loan get rejected. That’s a staggering number, and it’s easy to think that this is just a ripple effect of the financial crisis of 2008. After all, banks almost by definition tighten the credit spigot during a banking crisis, and there’s no question that the crash is partly responsible for the 20 percent decline in small-business lending from the pre-crisis boom. Moreover, terms on small business loans tightened during the crisis, and have loosened much less for small firms than for large firms during the recovery.
But, that’s not the whole story. The truth is that over the past two decades, small business loans have fallen from about half to under 30 percent of total bank loans. That secular decline is due to a multitude of factors, including high transaction costs of small business loans and regulators that push banks to hold more capital against business loans than consumer loans, further driving up the costs of small-business lending.
Step-by-step explanation: