Cruel, Short-sighted attack on low-income Communities by dismantling CDFI fund

The federal government has a powerful tool to spur investment in communities traditionally locked out of it. But Trump is dismantling it.

Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, OtherWords
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Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, OtherWords
Dedrick Asante-Muhammad is the president of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. For the past 20 years, Asante-Muhammad has dedicated his career to understanding...
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Money Mart payday loans and check cashing store in Sacramento, California. Photo: Tony Webster, Creative Commons Attribution 2.0

This article was originally published on OtherWords.

The Trump administration has eliminated the entire staff of the Treasury Department’s Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund.

This is more than bureaucratic reshuffling — it’s an assault on one of the most effective and bipartisan vehicles for community investment in America.

With a single order, the administration has frozen 11 programs that deliver lifelines to small businesses, working families, and neighborhoods across the nation.

For three decades, the CDFI Fund has quietly powered economic opportunity in places where traditional finance rarely reaches — from rural towns to historically disinvested urban communities.

Through community-based banks, credit unions, and loan funds, it helps small business owners secure capital, supports affordable housing, and finances essential infrastructure.

Last year alone, nearly 110,000 businesses and over 45,000 affordable housing units were supported.

CDFIs are the backbone of many local economies, especially in low-income communities and communities of color that continue to face systemic barriers to accessing credit.

This work has never been partisan.

Created under President Bill Clinton and strengthened by both Republican and Democratic administrations, the CDFI Fund has long enjoyed broad support on Capitol Hill.

Even conservative leaders like Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), among other Republicans, have urged the Treasury to release its congressionally approved funding.

Their message was simple: CDFIs are indispensable partners in ensuring that economic growth reaches every corner of America.

Yet more than 100 CDFI Fund employees have now been terminated.

Treasury officials claim the action “aligns with the president’s priorities” — a chilling phrase that reveals how ideological battles are being waged at the expense of everyday Americans.

CDFIs aren’t ideological experiments — they’re logical, market-based tools for building wealth in communities that have long been locked out of opportunities.

They leverage public dollars with private capital, multiply their impact through partnerships, and operate with financial discipline and accountability.

To gut the infrastructure making this possible is to cripple a network that works.

This decision isn’t only cruel — it’s economically reckless.

It undermines decades of bipartisan progress toward inclusive growth.

It tells Black entrepreneurs, rural families, and small business owners that their economic futures are expendable.

And it signals that the federal government’s commitment to fair access to capital now depends on political winds rather than shared American values.

The timing couldn’t be worse.

Black unemployment, which had reached historic lows in recent years, climbed above 7 percent in August. Small businesses that survived the pandemic are still rebuilding, but their loan approval rates have slowed to their lowest point since the pandemic. And many local economies are contending with higher borrowing costs and reduced federal support.

In this context, dismantling the nation’s community finance apparatus is willful neglect.

Congress has a duty to act.

Lawmakers should move swiftly to reopen the government and restore staffing to the CDFI Fund and protect its statutory programs.

They should ensure that federal investment in CDFIs continues to flow and that these institutions can operate free from ideological interference.

Philanthropy and the private sector, too, must step up — both to fill immediate gaps and to reaffirm the principle that opportunity should not depend on ZIP code or skin color.

The CDFI Fund represents one of the government’s best ideas: that targeted public investment can unlock private enterprise, strengthen communities, and expand shared prosperity.

Few programs can claim the success of nearly $300 billion mobilized annually, millions of jobs supported, and thousands of communities transformed.

To dismantle it now is to turn our backs on that record of proven success.

America’s future doesn’t depend on tax cuts and deregulation for the wealthiest — it depends on inclusive growth, strong local economies, and a financial system that works for everyone.

That’s what CDFIs make possible.

And that’s what we stand to lose if this decision is allowed to stand.

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Dedrick Asante-Muhammad is the president of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. For the past 20 years, Asante-Muhammad has dedicated his career to understanding and tackling racial and economic inequities. Asante-Muhammad joins the Joint Center from the Racial Economic Equity and Research at the National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC) where he was vice president. During Asante-Muhammad’s tenure at NCRC, he oversaw fair lending, fair housing, the Women’s Business Center of DC, the National Training Academy, the Housing Counseling Network, and started the Racial Economic Equity Department. As chief of Membership, Policy, and Equity at NCRC, Asante-Muhammad oversaw Membership, Organizing, Research, and Policy. Asante-Muhammad has worked at many of the nation’s top national non-profit advocacy organizations. Before joining NCRC, Asante-Muhammad served as director, senior fellow, and founder of the Racial Wealth Divide Initiative for Prosperity Now. Before this role, he worked as the senior director for Economic Programs at the NAACP; an associate fellow for the Institute for Policy Studies; was a Racial Wealth Divide coordinator for United for a Fair Economy; and served as Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network National field director. While at United for a Fair Economy, Asante-Muhammad co-founded the State of the Dream report, an annual publication honoring the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., that examines the state of racial and economic inequality in the U.S. Asante-Muhammad has continued to be a co-author, providing analysis in publications, including “The Road to Zero Wealth” and “Ten Solutions to Bridge the Racial Wealth Divide.”
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