Small Business Grows Less Optimistic in June
Washington, DC, July 13, 2010--U.S. small businesses grew more pessimistic about their economic outlook in June, the National Federal of Independent Businesses said.
The NFIB's monthly survey of members showed the small business optimism index fell by 3.2 points in June, dipping to 89, after posting several months of gains.
"Seventy percent of the decline this month resulted from a deterioration in the outlook for business conditions and real sales gains," the NFIB survey concluded.
The report is based on 805 responses to a random survey of NFIB members.
"The performance of the economy is mediocre at best, given the extent of the decline over the past two years," the NFIB survey concluded. "Pent-up demand should be immense, but it is not triggering a rapid pickup in economic activity."
Very few small businesses said they plan to create new jobs. The survey showed that only 10% of firms plan new hiring, down 4 points from May, the NFIB said.
About 8% of firms plan to reduce their workforce, up one point from the previous month.
More firms are anticipating declining sales than are expecting higher sales. Many are cutting prices to attract customers and are liquidating inventories, the survey said.