The group's Index of Small Business Optimism rose to 105.2 from
103.6 in June. The rise was the index's first since January.
Business owners signaled optimism in their ability to expand
partly due to a pick-up in consumer spending. It follows solid
hiring activity among small businesses in July as reported by
the group last week, and rosy jobs data released by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics on Friday.
"Strong consumer demand is boosting small business optimism,"
Juanita Duggan, president of NFIB, said in a release. "Small
business owners are feeling better about the economy because
their customers are feeling better about the economy."
The share of U.S. small business owners with plans to add to
payrolls in July exceeded those planning to cut jobs by 19
percentage points on a seasonally adjusted basis, NFIB data
showed. That is a 4-point increase from June and the strongest
reading since December 1999.
Moreover, 60 percent of owners said they were hiring or trying
to hire, a 6-point increase from June.
Yet when it came to filling those positions, 87 percent of small
businesses said they were having a difficult time finding
qualified workers.
Though optimism remained high, small businesses also showed
little enthusiasm for laying out capital expenditure plans, a
sign that businesses are still waiting to see what
business-friendly policies come out of Washington, Duggan said.
(Reporting by Kimberly Chin; Editing by Richard Borsuk)
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