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The Slow Strangulation of Black Business Opportunity 

February 27, 2026

The federal 8(a) Business Development Program, designed to help disadvantaged small businesses access federal contracts, is facing significant rollbacks amid broader political attacks on diversity initiatives. While Black-owned businesses represent nearly a quarter of eligible firms, they receive only a small fraction of federal contract dollars, making 8(a) their primary entry point into government contracting. The Small Business Administration has dramatically reduced new admissions to the program in 2025 and suspended over 1,000 active participants, raising concerns that enforcement is being used as justification for elimination rather than improvement.

Who is affected

  • Black-owned businesses and other socially and economically disadvantaged small business owners
  • Approximately 4,300 firms currently active in the 8(a) program (with over 1,000 suspended)
  • Minority-owned firms that represent 24% of eligible businesses but receive only 3% of contract awards
  • Federal agencies, particularly the Department of Defense which awarded over $18 billion to 8(a) firms in 2024
  • Small Business Administration
  • Federal taxpayers and consumers of government services
  • Future applicants to the program (only 65 admitted in 2025 compared to over 2,000 in the previous four years)

What action is being taken

  • The Small Business Administration has admitted only 65 companies to the 8(a) program in 2025
  • The SBA suspended more than 1,000 of roughly 4,300 active firms in January for noncompliance
  • The Department of Defense is conducting a review of the 8(a) program intended to eliminate what it describes as unconstitutional and non-merit-based DEI elements
  • The program is being scaled back amid broader political efforts to roll back diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives

Why it matters

  • This matters because the 8(a) program serves as the primary pathway for disadvantaged businesses, particularly Black-owned firms, to access federal contracting opportunities that would otherwise be unavailable due to longstanding racial inequities and barriers to capital, bonding, and commercial networks. Despite the program's existence, Black-owned businesses still receive only about 1.5 percent of total federal contract dollars, far below their representation in the small business community. Eliminating or significantly shrinking the program without replacement would further concentrate federal contracts among established incumbents, reduce supplier diversity, weaken federal supply chain resilience, and eliminate one of the few structured mechanisms for expanding economic opportunity and competition. The debate represents a broader conflict between using enforcement to improve program effectiveness versus using it as justification for dismantling affirmative economic development tools.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: Michigan Chronicle

The Slow Strangulation of Black Business Opportunity