The U.S. government gives refugees on public assistance special
“loans” of up to $15,000 to start a business but fails to keep track of
defaults that could translate into huge losses for American taxpayers, records
obtained by Judicial Watch reveal. The cash is distributed through a
program called Microenterprise Development run by the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Refugee Resettlement.
Since 2010 the program has granted thousands of loans to refugees
that lack the financial resources, credit history or personal assets to
qualify for business loans from commercial banks. Most if not all the
recipients already get assistance or subsidies from the government,
according to the qualification guidelines set by the Microenterprise
Development Program. It’s a risky operation that blindly gives public
funds to poor foreign nationals with no roots in the U.S. and there’s no
follow up to assure the cash is paid back. The idea behind it is to
“equip refugees with the skills they need to become successful
entrepreneurs” by helping them expand or maintain their own business and
become financially independent.
Earlier this year, Judicial Watch submitted a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request to HHS for records related to the refugee business
loan program. Specifically, JW asked for the number of loans that are
written off per year and the amount of the write-off per defaulted loan.
Unlike commercial banks or other lending institutions, HHS doesn’t keep
track of default rates on loans issued through the Microenterprise
program. This is astonishing considering that these are taxpayer dollars
being furnished in the form of loans to foreign nationals granted
refuge in the United States. An HHS official told JW the agency doesn’t
have a tracking system in place to provide figures involving loan
defaults. However, the agency is “preparing to collect this information
in the future,” according to the records obtained by JW from the agency.
What we do know is that from 2010 to 2015, HHS gave a total of 3,096
of these so-called micro loans, the records show. In 2015 a record 558
loans were granted to refuges but it’s not clear for what amount. At the
high end, if all 558 loans made last year were for the full $15,000
available to each refugee that would mean that HHS can’t account for an
astounding $8.37 million. Here’s the rest of the breakdown, according to
the records furnished by HHS as a result of JW’s FOIA request; in 2010
the agency granted 550 micro loans; in 2011, 541; 2012, 437; 2013, 466;
2014, 544. That’s a big chunk of change. The last year HHS filed an
official annual report on this questionable cash giveaway was 2011. No
official records have been made available to the public since then,
which is why JW launched an investigation. According to the 2011 annual
report, which resembles a promotional brochure, the default rate is only
3% but no further details or breakdown is offered making the
information less than credible.
HHS is not the only government agency doling out huge sums of cash
for this cause, though its focus on refugees appears to be unique.
Others, such as the U.S. Agency of International Development (USAID),
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Labor
(DOL) also dedicate hundreds of millions of dollars to various
microenterprise causes. For instance, in one recent year alone USAID
spent $223 million
on microenterprise development activities, according to figures
released by the agency. The USDA also allocates large sums to provide
loans and grants to microenterprise development through a special “Rural Microloan Revolving Fund”
and the DOL regularly pours lots of money into various microenterprise
projects that are promoted as workforce investments in areas with high
rates of poverty.
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