Insights

The backbone of America

The backbone of America

Insights

DATE POSTED: 2/27/2026

How small businesses drive growth — and why access to capital is key.

Every great American story — the bakery that became a regional chain, the contractor who built a neighborhood, the startup that disrupted an industry — began the same way: with a determined individual, a bold idea, and the capital to make it happen.

Small businesses are not a footnote to the American economy. They are its foundation. And in an era when traditional financing has become harder to access, a new generation of alternative financing solutions is stepping up to ensure that foundation holds.

There are 34.7 million small businesses in the United States — and together, they account for 43.5% of the nation's entire GDP.

At Seaport Funding Group, we connect entrepreneurs and business owners with the capital they need to grow. But before we talk about financing, let's talk about what's truly at stake — and why the rise of alternative finance isn't just a market trend. It's a national imperative.

Small businesses are the American economy

The numbers are striking. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration's 2024 Office of Advocacy report, small businesses — defined as firms with fewer than 500 employees — make up 99.9% of all U.S. businesses. That's not a rounding artifact. That's a reality that shapes every city, county, and community in this country.

  • 99.9% of all U.S. businesses are small businesses (SBA Office of Advocacy, 2024)

  • 34.7 million small businesses are currently operating in the U.S. (SBA Office of Advocacy, 2024)

  • 43.5% of U.S. GDP comes from small businesses (SBA / U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 2024)

  • Approximately 59–62 million Americans are employed by small businesses (BLS / SBA, 2024)

  • 45.9% of all private-sector employees work for small businesses (SBA Office of Advocacy, 2024)

  • 39% of all private-sector payroll is paid by small businesses (SBA Office of Advocacy, 2024)

These aren't abstract statistics. They represent your neighbor's auto repair shop, the family restaurant on Main Street, the contractor who built half the homes in your subdivision. Each one of these businesses is a living, breathing node of the American economy.

Small businesses are America's engine of job creation

If you want to understand where American jobs come from, follow the small business. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, small businesses contributed 55% of all net job creation between 2013 and 2023 — despite employing an average of just 46% of the covered workforce during that same period.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury went further in its December 2024 analysis of the post-COVID economic expansion, finding that small businesses created over 70% of net new jobs since 2019 — up from 64% in the previous business cycle.

Small businesses are punching far above their weight in job creation — contributing over 70% of net new jobs since 2019 while representing less than half the workforce.

That's not just impressive — it's essential. Large corporations make headlines, but small businesses make payrolls. They also pay competitively: the U.S. Chamber of Commerce reports that small businesses pay employees an average of $30.42 per hour, equating to roughly $63,000 in annual income.

Between 1995 and 2023, small businesses were responsible for creating more than 20 million net new jobs — 61.1% of all net jobs created during that span. (SBA Office of Advocacy, 2024)

The entrepreneurship surge: America is betting on itself

One of the most encouraging economic stories of the past several years has been the explosion in new business formation. The COVID-19 pandemic, for all its hardship, unleashed a wave of entrepreneurial energy unlike anything seen in modern American history.

The U.S. Census Bureau tracks "high-propensity" business applications — those with a real likelihood of hiring workers — as a meaningful proxy for genuine entrepreneurial activity. As of November 2025, these applications hit a cumulative high of 1.8 million year-to-date, about 16% greater than the same period in 2024. (USAFacts, citing Census Bureau data, 2025)

Over 5 million new businesses were started in 2023 alone — one of the biggest surges in entrepreneurial activity on record. (U.S. Census Bureau Annual Business Survey, 2024) The number of new business applications has jumped nearly 50% over the past decade.

The demographics of this new wave of entrepreneurs are equally compelling. In 2024, Millennials accounted for 16% of small business owners, up 27% from 2023. Women are launching businesses at nearly double the rate of men since 2020, with more than 1,800 new women-owned businesses launched every single day. Minority-owned businesses are growing rapidly, with Hispanic-owned businesses increasing 34% over the past decade.

America isn't just recovering — it's reinventing. The surge in new business formation represents a generational shift toward entrepreneurship, and it's reshaping the economic landscape from the ground up.

The funding gap: where ambition meets obstacle

Here is where the story gets harder — and more important.

Small businesses drive the economy, create jobs, and fuel innovation. But they face a persistent, frustrating reality when it comes to accessing the capital they need to operate and grow: the traditional banking system often isn't built for them.

  • 44% of SMBs did not apply for a loan because they feared they would be denied (Federal Reserve Small Business Credit Survey)

  • Only 14.6% of small business loan applications were approved by big banks (Federal Reserve Small Business Credit Survey)

  • 53% of small business owners said they couldn't afford loans due to high interest rates as of January 2024 (Goldman Sachs, 2024)

  • Nearly two-thirds of small businesses lack access to a business credit card (PYMNTS Research)

This isn't a story of bad businesses or unqualified borrowers. It's a story of a financing system that was built for large-balance, long-history borrowers — and that leaves the very engine of the American economy chronically underfunded.

The stakes are real. Cash flow gaps cause profitable businesses to close. Missed growth opportunities cost jobs. Communities lose the restaurants, retailers, and service providers that make them livable. When small businesses can't get capital, everyone pays the price.

The rise of alternative finance: filling the gap that banks left behind

The good news — and it is genuinely good news — is that the market has responded with force. Alternative financing has emerged as one of the most dynamic and consequential developments in modern commercial finance.

Alternative lending encompasses a broad range of non-bank financing solutions: merchant cash advances, revenue-based financing, business lines of credit, equipment financing, invoice factoring, and more. These products are designed specifically to meet small businesses where they are — with faster approvals, more flexible qualification criteria, and structures that align with how businesses actually generate revenue.

The numbers tell the story clearly:

  • $284.5 billion — U.S. alternative lending market size in 2024 (ResearchAndMarkets, 2024)

  • $378.6 billion — projected U.S. alternative lending market by 2028 (ResearchAndMarkets, 2024)

  • 7.4% CAGR — projected annual growth rate for U.S. alternative lending through 2028 (ResearchAndMarkets, 2024)

  • 13% CAGR — projected global small business lending market growth from 2024–2032 (Canopy Servicing, 2025)

  • 70,000+ SBA-approved loans in 2024, totaling $31.1 billion (SBA / Canopy Servicing, 2025)

What's driving this growth? Technology is transforming the speed and precision of underwriting. Data analytics, AI-powered risk assessment, and digital platforms allow alternative lenders to evaluate businesses based on real-world revenue performance — not just credit scores and years in business. For businesses that operate on thin margins or with variable cash flow, this is transformational.

Alternative financing isn't a last resort — it's a strategic tool. Over half of SMBs with more than $1 million in revenues now use financing as an intentional business strategy, not just a necessity. (PYMNTS Research)

For small business owners who have been turned away by traditional banks, or who simply need capital faster than a 60–90 day bank approval timeline allows, alternative financing offers something invaluable: options. And options mean opportunity.

Why this matters: capital enables the American dream

Behind every small business statistic is a human story. The contractor who needed working capital to take on a larger project and hire two more employees. The restaurant owner who needed equipment financing to open a second location. The retailer who needed a merchant cash advance to stock inventory ahead of the holiday season.

These aren't edge cases. They're the norm. And when capital is available — when the right financing solution is matched with the right business need — the ripple effects are powerful.

Studies show that 68 cents of every dollar spent at a small business stays in the local economy, compared to just 43 cents at large chain retailers. (National Business Association) When small businesses thrive, communities thrive. When they struggle to access capital, the entire ecosystem suffers.

The good news is that small business optimism is genuinely on the rise. The U.S. Department of the Treasury noted in December 2024 that more than 70% of small business leaders expected revenues to grow over the following year — the most since the pandemic. As inflation has eased and consumer spending has remained robust, confidence is returning.

The tools are there. The demand is there. The entrepreneurial energy is absolutely there. What has historically been missing is access to the right capital at the right time — and that gap is closing.

How Seport Funding Group fits into this story

At Seaport Funding Group, we exist at the intersection of small business need and alternative financing opportunity. As a commercial financing brokerage, we don't just offer a single product — we work with an extensive network of funding partners to match each business with the solution that fits their unique situation.

Whether you're looking for working capital to manage cash flow, equipment financing to expand capacity, or a merchant cash advance to seize a time-sensitive opportunity, we bring options to the table that most small business owners never knew existed.

We understand the urgency of business decisions. We understand that waiting months for a bank decision can mean losing a contract, a client, or a key employee. And we understand that the right capital at the right moment isn't just a financial transaction — it's a turning point.

Small businesses are not just surviving — they're leading the next chapter of American economic growth. Seaport Funding Group is here to make sure capital is never the reason that chapter goes unwritten.

Ready to explore your options?

If you're a small business owner looking for financing solutions, we'd love to have a conversation. There's no obligation — just an honest discussion about where your business is, where you want to go, and what funding tools might help you get there.

Contact Seaport Funding Group today and let's talk about what's possible.

Sources

  1. SBA Office of Advocacy — Frequently Asked Questions About Small Business, July 2024.

  2. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — "Small businesses contributed 55 percent of the total net job creation from 2013 to 2023." The Economics Daily, 2024.

  3. U.S. Department of the Treasury — "Small Business and Entrepreneurship in the Post-COVID Expansion." December 2024.

  4. U.S. Census Bureau — Small Business Week 2024 Data and Nonemployer Statistics.

  5. U.S. Chamber of Commerce — Small Business Data Center, 2024.

  6. USAFacts — "What role do small businesses play in the US economy?" 2025.

  7. Federal Reserve — Small Business Credit Survey.

  8. Goldman Sachs — 10,000 Small Businesses Survey, January 2024.

  9. ResearchAndMarkets — United States Alternative Lending Market, 2024.

  10. Canopy Servicing — "The state of small business lending: statistics and trends for 2025."

  11. National Business Association — "The Impact of Small Businesses on the U.S. Economy," 2024.

  12. 12. PYMNTS Research — SMB Financing as Strategy, 2024.

When you're ready to move forward, we're here to light the way.