Small business was big business in Geithner hearing
Wednesday, March 4, 2009 at 9:07PM
Talk Radio News Service (Admin) in Chairman Max Baucus, News/Commentary, President Obama, Senate Finance Committee, Senator Chuck Grassley, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, health care reform, small business, taxes
by Christina Lovato, University of New Mexico-Talk Radio News Service
“This is a very good budget, because it’s an honest budget...Now just because this is an honest budget does not mean that this is an easy budget. The budget presents some difficult realities, and it presents some hard choices.” said Senate Finance Committee Chairman, Max Baucus (D-Mont).
Today in the Senate Finance Committee meeting, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner testified and expressed why President Obama’s budget plan will work. "We are absolutely committed to working with you on how to produce a package of reforms that meets the President's broad principles in a way that is fiscally responsible for the country...We wanted to put on the table, to improve the credibility of our commitment to do this, concrete proposals that would achieve that.” Geithner stated.
Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) said that in 2007 small business created 74% of new jobs. “I don’t understand why you would charge small business operators more than you would charge corporations...I want to emphasize for the Secretary over half are between 20 and 500 employees. Those larger small businesses are also businesses most likely to expand or contract depending on business conditions.” he stated.
In addition to discussions about small business, taxes, and health care reform, Geithner expressed two critical functions that the government must accomplish to get the economy back on track. “We need to make sure that banks have the resources needed to provide credit to the economy...The basic machinery necessary for credit to work in our country is broken in some respects, the pipes are clogged...So a critical second part of our program is to act directly to get credit flowing again to get those markets to start opening up. The entire small business lending market, the auto finance market, the student loan market, the consumer credit markets depend on that machinery.” Geithner concluded.
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