Jodi Hall, owner of Cupcake Royale, a small the chain of local businesses. Jodi was speaking about the burden the current system creates for her business. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
The fourth decline in the past five months for the measure showed business leaders may be putting off some of their hiring and investment decisions because of a lack of clarity on tax and regulatory policy. At the same time, more companies expected better economic conditions in six months, signaling a pickup in sales and employment may take time to develop. Small-business “owners are in maintenance mode; spending only where necessary and not hiring,” William Dunkelberg, the group’s chief economist, said in a statement. “Owners are unwilling to put their own capital on the line until the future path of the economy and economic policy becomes clear.”
A measure of whether business owners plan to add more workers fell by six percentage points to a net 4 percent. The number of respondents who said they planned to invest in equipment dropped three points to a net 21 percent in September. The world’s largest economy added 114,000 workers last month, the fewest since June, according to a Labor Department report on Oct. 5. The jobless rate dropped to 7.8 percent after exceeding 8 percent for 43 straight months. The proportion of respondents who said it was hard to fill a job opening dropped to 17 percent in September from 18 percent a month earlier. The number of respondents who expected higher sales held at 1 percent.
A net negative 1 percent planned to increase inventories, also unchanged from August. A net negative 1 percent of small business owners said their inventories were too low, down one point from the previous month. The survey’s net figures are calculated by subtracting the percent of business owners giving a negative answer from those with a positive response and adjusting the results for seasonal variations.Companies surveyed said the most important problem facing them in 2012 is the rising cost of health care insurance, followed by little foresight into economic conditions, energy costs and government policy. ... Continue to read.
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