Heraldnet.com
MONDAY, MARCH 15, 2010 8:25 am
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
RECENT POSTS:
Governor OKs plan to save Main Street Program  March 12

Downtown living: What would Everett get back?  March 12

Tax credit for small businesses clears Senate  March 11

Cupcake business: From pink slip to pink box  March 11

NFIB: Biz owners still down in the dumps  March 10

Archives:
LINKS:

About us
About The Storefront

Franchises
Franchise registration
International Franchise Association
SBA on Franchises

Recommended Reading
BizBox
Duct Tape Marketing
Fresh Inc.
Making Payroll
Mike Benbow
Reuters Small Business
Small Business Trends
The Entrepreneurial Mind
The New Entrepreneur
Up and Running
Washington Small Business Development Centers
You're the Boss

Resources
Development Centers
Economic Development Council
IRS barter tax tips
Labor and Industries
Seattle Score
Small Business Administration
Tips from Inc.
Women’s Business Centers
Workforce Explorer
Twitter Updates
    RELATED ARTICLES:
    Commuter trains resume after Edmonds mudslide  March 15
    Mill Creek wants public's help to identify needs  March 15
    Chocolate elegance: Monroe chocolatier hopes shop grows from simple beginnings  March 15
    Biz Bits  March 15
    Everett studies tax credit for new jobs  March 15
    Time to dole out Cappies, despite Olympia's unfinished business  March 14
    Suspect's bra padded with $26,000, Spokane deputies say  March 14
    FAA issues emergency inspections of some 737s  March 14
    Minnesota transplant settled into Northwest life  March 14
    U.S. 2 accident victim remains hospitalized  March 14
     

    ADVERTISEMENT

    The Storefront


     
     

    Report shows optimism up, jobs down


    Posted at 2:35 pm by Amy Rolph

    The National Federation of Independent Business released its quarterly report yesterday, showing small-business owners are more optimistic about the economy, but still not hiring.

    For starters, here are the basics laid out in the report, which you can read here.



    In a nutshell, optimism is higher than it has been in the last 13 months, according to the business owners surveyed. But that optimism isn't playing out in the way you might think.

    Small business sales are still low, prices are still dropping and jobs are still being cut, according to the report.

    Here's the historical outlook:



    The NFIB, which has long been critical of efforts to bolster small-business lending, released this commentary on what the report turned up:

    "The (Obama) administration has recently jumped on the 'small business bandwagon,' although little important action has been taken. It sounds like the Administration thinks the reason small firms are not hiring is that they are not able get credit. Although credit is harder to get, “financing” is cited as the “most important problem” by only four percent of NFIB's hundreds of thousands of member firms. Although a nice gesture, enhancing SBA lending programs will not help much – too many owners have no reason to borrow."

    The commentary continued: "Record low percentages cite the current period as a good time to expand, more owners plan to reduce inventories than to add to them, and record low percentages plan any capital expenditures. In short, the demand for credit is in short supply and failing to understand the more major problems facing small business leads to bad policy."

    COMMENTS | Be the first to comment

    Log in or register to post a new comment.


    To read other terms and conditions, click here

      Return to The Storefront
    Other Advertisers
    TODAY'S TOP JOBS
     View All Top Jobs 
    Top Cars
    Top Homes

    ADVERTISEMENT