As National Small Business Week approaches, hiring is slowing in parts of the economy at the exact moment growth should be accelerating. Incentives are in place. Demand is holding in key sectors. But growth is not breaking through at the pace the economy requires. The issue is not a lack of opportunity. It is the inability to act on it at speed.
An end to the war would ease pressure on costs, but the trajectory of growth will be determined by something more fundamental: whether businesses can cut through regulatory complexity, access capital, and move at the speed the economy demands.
The Trump administration improved incentives for small business investment through policies such as full expensing and regulatory streamlining. The priority now is to remove the remaining barriers that are slowing execution.
Small businesses account for 99.9% of U.S. firms and create roughly two-thirds of net new jobs, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. They are not a segment of the economy. They are a primary engine of growth. When they move, the economy grows. When they hesitate, it slows.
Right now, hesitation is taking hold across much of the small business economy.
According to the National Federation of Independent Business, confidence remains below historical norms, with owners citing uncertainty, borrowing costs, and hiring challenges as persistent concerns. That hesitation is increasingly translating into real decisions across the economy.
This is not primarily a demand problem. It is increasingly a failure to execute at the point of decision.
Small businesses are navigating rising costs, regulatory friction, and expensive, uneven access to capital at the same time. Together, these forces are slowing economic activity from the bottom up, not because opportunity is missing, but because acting on that opportunity has become too slow and too costly.
Incentives alone do not drive growth. Execution determines whether growth happens. Today, execution is constrained in three areas: permitting, regulation, and capital.
On regulation, the issue is not the standard. It is the process. Large firms can absorb compliance. Small businesses cannot. Time spent navigating complexity is time not spent growing. Money spent on compliance is money not invested in hiring, equipment, or expansion. In volatile conditions, this does not just slow growth; it suppresses it.
The solution is not weaker rules. It is faster, more predictable execution: tiered compliance frameworks so smaller firms are not forced through the same processes as multinational companies; expedited permitting for low-risk projects where outcomes are well understood; and standardized pathways that allow businesses to meet requirements without building legal infrastructure from scratch. Clarity up front matters because uncertainty halts action faster than cost.
The most immediate constraint on growth is capital.
Small businesses are operating in one of the most expensive borrowing environments in recent years. Many owners continue to cite borrowing costs and credit availability as top concerns, while banks have tightened lending standards, limiting access to credit for less established borrowers.
At these interest rate levels, businesses are making rational decisions to delay expansion, defer equipment purchases, and hold back on hiring. This is already shaping real decisions across the country.
When the cost of capital rises, small businesses do not hedge risk the way large firms do. They pause. Some can still secure financing and move forward. Others cannot. Growth depends on large numbers of businesses acting at the same time. When fewer do, the economy expands more slowly.
Tax policy improved the incentive to invest. But it did not ensure that businesses could fund that decision. For many small businesses, capital must be both available and affordable at the same time. Right now, it is often neither sufficiently available nor affordable.
The result is a slowdown that is only partially visible in headline data but increasingly evident in behavior. Hiring softens. Investment is delayed. Growth loses momentum. The net share of small business owners expecting better business conditions remains negative, a signal based on NFIB data that hesitation is becoming embedded.
The United States does not have a demand problem. It has a speed problem.
Many small businesses are positioned to hire, invest, and expand. But when capital is expensive, processes are slow, and uncertainty delays decisions, action stalls. And when action stalls at scale, growth does not break through.
The Trump administration reset the conditions for growth. The question now is whether policymakers will remove the barriers that are slowing it. If they do, small businesses will move, and when they move, the economy accelerates. If they do not, hesitation will continue to define this moment.
