More small businesses get federal contracts But government misses goal to award more to women-owned firms

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More small businesses get federal contracts But government misses goal to award more to women-owned firms

By Ilana DeBare
San Francisco Chronicle
August 27, 2005

U.S. small businesses received a record $69.23 billion in federal prime contracts last year, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration.

The agency said that 23.09 percent of all contracting dollars went to small firms in fiscal year 2004, surpassing the government's small-business procurement goal of 23 percent.

"The report shows that the government not only matched its own statutory goal, but it broke records by awarding more contracting dollars to America's small businesses than ever before," said Hector Barreto, SBA administrator.

However, the government fell short of its procurement goals for small businesses owned by women. Small women-owned firms received $9.1 billion in prime contracts. That set a record but, at 3 percent of all contracting dollars, fell short of the goal of 5 percent.

"We are pleased that the trend is moving in the right direction, but we have more work to do before reaching the 5 percent goal that was mandated by Congress," said Barbara Kasoff, co-founder of Women Impacting Public Policy, a nonprofit group advocating on behalf of women in business.

Some critics questioned the accuracy of the SBA's figures, noting that in the past, the agency misclassified numerous large corporations as small businesses. "Clearly, the numbers are overstated by a significant portion," said Lloyd Chapman, president of the American Small Business League.





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