The
National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said its
Small Business Optimism Index fell 3.6 points last month to
89.5, the lowest level since January 2013. Thirty-four percent
of owners said that inflation was their biggest single problem
in running their business, an increase of six points from May
and the highest level since the fourth quarter of 1980.
Consumer prices are surging, driven by snarled global supply
chains and massive fiscal stimuli from governments early in the
COVID-19 pandemic, with the annual U.S. CPI increasing at a rate
last seen in the early 1980s. The situation has been worsened by
Russia's dragging war against Ukraine, which has caused a spike
in food and fuel prices across the world.
Soaring inflation has forced the Federal Reserve to adopt an
aggressive monetary policy, putting the economy on a recession
watch. The U.S. central bank has raised its policy rate by 150
basis points since March. It is expected to hike its overnight
interest rate by another 75 basis points this month.
The higher borrowing costs and worries about a recession have
not slowed demand for labor.
The NFIB survey showed 50% of owners reported job openings they
could not fill in June, down a point from May's reading, which
tied the previous record high. The vacancies were for both
skilled and unskilled labor, with worker shortages most severe
in the construction, manufacturing and services industries.
"The persistence of record high levels of unfilled openings
indicates that owners are still seeing opportunities to grow
their business, in spite of their negative outlook for the
future," said NFIB chief economist William Dunkelberg.
Solid demand for labor, which was underscored by
stronger-than-expected job growth in June, raises hope that any
economic downturn will be short and mild.
Despite concerns about an inventory bloat, small businesses are
not done restocking, with the survey finding that "a significant
amount of what they want sits frustratingly just off the coasts
or in containers waiting for transport."
(Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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