With weak sales as a major challenge, four out of five U.S. small business owners will maintain or reduce their number of full-time employees over the next six months, and they see little value in proposed Federal incentives to create jobs, according to the PNC Economic Outlook survey’s newest findings.
Only 14 percent of businesses say proposed tax incentives will positively impact their hiring plans, PNC found, as owners’ expectations for sales and profits are significantly lower than last spring, ushering in renewed pessimism compared to six months ago.
“As business confidence plunges to a near-record low, the concern is we will scare ourselves into a double-dip recession, thus turning it into a self-fulfilling prophecy,” said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. “These findings support our forecast that the economic recovery will persist, but the slow pace of growth will be insufficient to make any progress in lowering the nation’s painfully high unemployment rate in the coming year.”
The survey, which gauges the mood and sentiment of small and medium sized business owners, also found that more than half (56 percent) expect the recent debt ceiling deal to have a negative impact on the U.S. economy.
In a sign that small businesses will remain resilient amid the nation’s sluggish economic state, eight out of 10 hope to grow their business over the next two years. The mood brightens for some in the fourth quarter of this year, as three out of 10 owners expect a ‘gift’ of higher profits this holiday season compared to a year ago. Among them, 70 percent expect profits to increase by at least six percent. Meanwhile, 41 percent foresee no change in profits from last year and 29 percent expect a decline.