The
National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said its
Small Business Optimism Index was unchanged at a reading of 93.2
last month. The index had declined since January.
Thirty-two percent of owners reported that inflation was their
single most important problem in operating their business. That
was the largest share since the fourth quarter of 1980 and was
up a point from March.
The economy is experiencing high inflation caused by shortages,
massive fiscal stimulus and low interest rates. Annual inflation
is rising at the fastest pace in 40 years.
The Federal Reserve last week raised its policy interest rate by
half a percentage point, the biggest hike in 22 years, and said
it would begin trimming its bond holdings next month. The U.S.
central bank started raising rates in March.
According to the NFIB survey, more owners expected business
conditions to worsen over the next six months. But there are
signs inflation has likely peaked. The share of owners raising
average selling prices eased slightly from March's record high.
That could be reinforced by the Labor Department's consumer
price report on Wednesday. According to a Reuters survey of
economists, the consumer price index likely rose 0.2% last month
after surging 1.2% in March. That would result in the CPI
gaining 8.1% in the 12 months through April after accelerating
8.5% in March.
Also hinting at a peak in price pressures, the share of
businesses reporting they had increased compensation fell three
points to 46%. There was also a dip in the proportion intending
to raise compensation over the next three months.
This was despite small businesses still struggling to find
workers to fill open positions. The share of owners reporting
open jobs was unchanged at 47%. According to the NFIB, the
worker shortages were most "acute" in the construction,
manufacturing, and retail sectors. It said job openings were the
lowest in the agriculture and finance sectors.
The government reported last week that there were a record 11.5
million job openings across the economy at the end of March.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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