Title 15 › Chapter 14B— SMALL BUSINESS INVESTMENT PROGRAM › Subchapter I— GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 662
Defines key words used in this chapter. Administration is the Small Business Administration. Administrator is the head of the Small Business Administration. Small business investment company, company, and licensee are firms the Administration approves and licenses to operate under this chapter. State includes the States, U.S. territories and possessions, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia. Small-business concern has the same meaning as in the Small Business Act but with two special rules: investments by venture capital firms, investment companies (including small business investment companies), tax-exempt employee welfare or pension plans, trusts, foundations, or endowments do not make a business non-independent and are ignored for size and “smaller enterprise” tests; and if a business passes income through instead of paying federal corporate tax, its net income is figured by deducting estimated state taxes (marginal state rate times net income) and then estimated federal tax on the remainder. Development companies are state-incorporated groups that promote small-business growth. License is the license the Administration issues. Articles are articles of incorporation or similar documents the Administrator requires. Private capital is a licensee’s paid-in equity plus qualifying unfunded commitments (which can count for approval but cannot be used to fund leverage); it does not include borrowed money, funds from issuing leverage, or government funds except: (I) business revenues of federally chartered or government-sponsored corporations established before October 1, 1987; (II) funds from employee welfare benefit or pension plans; and (III) qualified nonprivate funds if those investors do not control the licensee. Leverage includes debentures or participating securities purchased or guaranteed by the Administration and preferred securities outstanding as of October 1, 1995. Third party debt is any borrowed money owed to someone other than the Administration. Smaller enterprise is a small business that with affiliates has net worth of not more than $6,000,000 and an average after-tax net income for the prior 2 years of not more than $2,000,000 (using the same pass-through tax calculation described above), or that meets the Administration’s industry size standard. Qualified nonprivate funds are funds invested by a federal agency on or before August 16, 1982 under a law that requires them to count as private capital, funds invested by a federal agency after September 4, 1992 under a law that requires them to count, and state or local government investments or guarantees that are no more than 33 percent of the applicant’s private capital. Employee welfare benefit plan and pension plan have the ERISA section 3 meanings and include similar public plans. Member is an owner in an LLC licensee. Limited liability company is an entity formed under a state LLC law approved by the Administration. Long term means at least 1 year for equity or loan funds. Energy Saving debenture is a deferred-interest debenture issued at a discount, maturing in 5 or 10 years, with no interest or annual charge for the first 5 years, limited to Energy Saving qualified investments, and issued at no cost as defined in section 661a of title 2. Energy Saving qualified investment is an investment in a small business mainly engaged in reducing use of non‑renewable energy. Underlicensed State is one with fewer licensees per person than the median for all States, as calculated by the Administrator.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 662
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60