close
close
SBA administrator Kelly Loeffler in small companies, Trump’s first 100 days

Small business owners in Metro Atlanta are mixed feelings about the president’s success during his second term.

Atlanta – President Donald Trump’s administration emphasizes his work in order to give small entrepreneurs a thrust because he takes on 100 days in office. However, some Georgia business owners show signs of optimism for the precautionary measures.

Patrice Hull sells clothes, pockets, pins and notebooks in a small five points that we want to say. The shop has been stuck for 13 years and weathered in a popular quarter that attracts many tourists. Hull said after being released a third time, she decided to found her own company.

While the business was constant, Hull said that her end result needed a pick-me-up because tariffs hit your business hard.

“At the speed at which it is running, there will be no end to me if things don’t lose weight,” said Hull. “I didn’t want to give my customers to spin. Let me wait, I will absorb some of the costs and just go from there. Now, when I look at my costs, I have to make big changes. So I have to pass on some of the costs to the customers.”

Hull said she used to sell more innovations to try to compensate for the losses in her regular inventory.

The UP I-85 in Suwanee has advertised Kelly Loeffler, the administrator for small businesses, the work of the Trump administration in order to promote small companies across the country through lower regulations, an advance on cheaper US trade policy and the efforts to renew tax cuts in the first term of the president.

“We see growth in all areas of small businesses,” said Loeffler. “Small businesses loans, if you have increased trust, there is a chance of growth, and we have seen strong optimism because thanks to the agenda that is reduced by President Trump, which is a pro-American worker, we went in this country.”

Loeffler spoke to Winton Machine, a production system that produces copper pipes and other parts for devices and machines. She claimed that core inflation had been reduced to four -year -old deep stalls, and the energy prices recorded several years. Loeffler also advertised an increase in private investments of around 6 trillion dollars for new factories, manufacturing and technology in the USA

“What small companies are confronted today is different than a year ago when they were crushed by inflation,” said Loeffler. “They saw the energy prices that turned. They saw the inability to attract qualified workers. They know that this negotiation period with gender discussions will return to a stronger, greater chance in this country, in contrast to what we have only accelerated with massive trade deficits, which only accelerated and steal our jobs and our industry.”

Loeffler spoke under what she described as a reduction in the SBA workforce by 43 percent. She said that the agency also saved the taxpayer millions of dollars by reforming its loan programs, the implementation of the citizens’ check and the improvement of underwriting standards.

She also claimed that the Trump government approved about 80 percent more loans in the first 100 days than in the first 100 days by President Biden. However, it is important to note that bidges accepted its office during the Covid 19 pandemic.

Lisa Winton, CEO and co -owner of Winton Machine, pointed out to Cashflow and qualified workforce as the greatest challenges with which she is currently confronted with tariffs. Winton and her husband founded the first generation production company 26 years ago to touch life all over the world. The business has about 40 employees, and Winton said that she was confident that Trump’s economic policy would initiate a new era of success for the work.

“We all need regulation, but if you have so many regulations as a small company, you cannot concentrate on what is really important,” said Winton. “So we will create a more precise field. We hope. At the moment it is a measure of uncertainty, but we are optimistic.”

Hull said that the economic changes were too fast and were not with concerns about the concerns of small entrepreneurs. But in a time of uncertainty she said she hope for the best.

“I built everything I owned into this business,” said Hull. “It will continue to grow, but now I just have to find out who does what. I just have to keep going, even if I have to turn it either way.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZL-HMX3R7A

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *