Op-Ed by Marc Parham, http://www.marcparham.com
Photo by Surface on Unsplash
In recent months, we’ve seen a flurry of policy changes from Washington that are sending tremors through the small business community. As someone who has spent decades working with entrepreneurs on the front lines — in neighborhoods, community centers, and boardrooms — I’ve seen how even the smallest shift in policy can create tidal waves for small business owners. And today, we’re not dealing with small ripples. We’re staring down a storm.
The policies in question range from proposed tax code revisions to the rollback of diversity and inclusion initiatives in federal contracting. While they may appear distant or bureaucratic to the average citizen, they carry direct consequences for the men and women who fuel our local economies.
Take, for instance, the potential repeal of tax incentives that support small business investment. These incentives have helped level the playing field, encouraging growth, hiring, and innovation in communities that need it most. If these are rolled back, it will stifle expansion plans, reduce access to capital, and deter new startups from even entering the arena.
Then there’s the shift in federal contracting priorities. Many minority- and women-owned businesses depend on access to government contracts as a pathway to growth. Rolling back policies that prioritize equity and inclusion will slam the door on thousands of entrepreneurs who were just starting to get a seat at the table. We cannot let these gains be erased in the name of “efficiency.”
Additionally, changes to labor laws — including potential limitations on wage protections and benefits for gig workers — could widen the gap between large corporations and small businesses. These policy moves are not just numbers on paper; they affect real people’s lives. They determine whether a mother can hire two employees for her bakery or whether a freelance tech consultant can afford health insurance next month.
What’s perhaps most alarming is that these changes are being implemented at a time when small businesses are still recovering from the economic shocks of the past few years. Inflation, supply chain disruptions, and the aftermath of the pandemic already created a tough road. Adding policy instability only compounds the uncertainty.
So, what can we do?
First, we must stay informed. Small business owners must pay attention, ask questions, and engage with local chambers of commerce and advocacy organizations. Second, we must speak up. Reach out to your elected officials — make them understand how these policies impact your livelihood. Third, we must support one another. Now more than ever, we need networks and partnerships that build resilience from the ground up.
At the Entrepreneurial Edge Network, we remain committed to keeping small business voices at the forefront of the national conversation. Because if small businesses fail, communities fail — and we cannot afford that.
These policies may be written in marble halls, but their real impact is felt on Main Street. And it’s time we remind policymakers that small business is the backbone of America.
Marc Parham is the founder of the Entrepreneurial Edge Network and a longtime advocate for small business development.