|  Of the 10 components of the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index, 
			seven turned negative, falling a total of 27 percentage points. 
			The stalemate in early October over funding the government as well 
			as the failed "launch" of the Obamacare website left 68 percent of 
			the business owners surveyed feeling that the current period is a 
			bad time to expand, and 37 percent of those owners identified the 
			political climate in Washington as the culprit -- a record-high 
			level. State-specific data isn't available, but Kim Clarke Maisch, state 
			director of the National Federation of Independent Business, said 
			owners of small businesses here are just as worried as those in 
			other states. "Small business owners need certainty," she said. "That isn't 
			what they've been getting from Washington." Bill Dunkelberg, chief economist with the NFIB, said: "Washington 
			paralysis is never good news for the economy, so it was no surprise 
			that while politicians were arguing over whether or not the 
			government should remain fully operational, small business optimism 
			measures deteriorated. 
			
			 "Small employers are not fooled by headlines announcing 
			record-high stock market indices; everyday they live the economic 
			realities of overregulation, increased taxes, weak sales and a 
			government without any direction or plan for the future," he said. "The average value of the index since the recovery started is 91 
			-- 8 points below the 35-year average through 2007 and well below 
			readings typically experienced in a recovery," Dunkelberg said. "The 
			new budget deadline of Jan. 15, 2014, is approaching quickly, and 
			Congress continues to wrangle over the disastrous health care law 
			and little else. We shouldn't expect skies to turn blue anytime 
			soon." The NFIB Optimism Index provides an opportunity to examine the 
			impact of major events with "before and after" interviews from small 
			business owners. In the case of the government shutdown, the 
			majority of the September survey responses were received a week 
			before the end of the month, and two-thirds of the 1,940 October 
			surveys were received and recorded by Oct. 20, the height of the 
			shutdown debate. Thus, the two monthly surveys provide a very good "before and 
			after" analysis. Late in September, the likelihood of a shutdown 
			grew, but the September interviews were also mostly completed and 
			processed well before the end of the month. Survey highlights 
			[to top of second column] | 
 
			 
			
				
				Earnings trends did not improve in 
			October, remaining at a negative 23 percent. Two percent of owners 
			reported reduced worker compensation, and 18 percent reported 
			raising compensation, yielding a net 16 percent reporting higher 
			worker compensation, down 1 point. A net 10 percent plan to raise 
			compensation in the coming months, down 3 points. Overall, the 
			compensation picture remained at the better end of experience in 
			this recovery but historically weak for periods of economic growth 
			and recovery.Earnings and wages:
				Credit continues to be a nonissue for small 
			employers, 6 percent of whom say that all their credit needs were 
			not met in October, unchanged from the previous month. Twenty-eight 
			percent of owners surveyed reported all credit needs met, and 53 
			percent explicitly said they did not want a loan (64 percent when 
			including those who did not answer the question, presumably 
			uninterested in borrowing).Credit:
				In October, the frequency of reported 
			capital outlays over the past six months rose 2 points to 57 
			percent. The percent of owners planning capital outlays in the next 
			three to six months fell 2 points to 23 percent.Capital spending:
				Only 6 percent of owners characterized the 
			current period as a good time to expand, down 2 points from 
			September. The net percent of owners expecting better business 
			conditions in six months was a net negative 17 percent, 7 points 
			worse than September and 15 points worse than August.Expansion plans:
				The pace of inventory reduction continued in 
			September, with a net negative 6 percent of all owners reporting 
			growth in inventories, up 1 point from September. For all firms, a 
			net negative 5 percent, a 5-point drop, reported stocks too low, the 
			lowest reading since 2011.Inventories: 
				Fourteen percent, an unchanged percentage, of the 
			NFIB owners surveyed reported reducing their average selling prices 
			in the past three months, and 16 percent, up 2 points, reported 
			price increases. The net percent of owners raising average selling 
			prices was 5 percent, up 4 points. As for prospective price 
			increases, a net 18 percent, down 1 point, plan price hikes. Twenty 
			percent, an unchanged percentage, plan on raising average prices in 
			the next few months, and 3 percent, up 1 point, plan reductions.Inflation: *All net percentages are seasonally adjusted unless otherwise 
			noted. The net percentage is the percent with a favorable response 
			less the percent of owners with an unfavorable response. 
			 The current report is based on the responses of 1,940 randomly 
			sampled small businesses in NFIB's membership, surveyed throughout 
			the month of October. The 
			complete study 
			(PDF) is available at 
			http://www.nfib.com/sbetindex. 
			[Text from file received from
			National Federation of Independent 
			Business] 
			NFIB's
			Small Business Economic Trends is a monthly survey of small 
			business owners' plans and opinions. Decision-makers at the federal, 
			state and local levels actively monitor these reports, ensuring that 
			the voice of small business is heard. The 
			NFIB Research Foundation 
			conducts some of the most comprehensive research of small business 
			issues in the nation. The National Federation of Independent 
			Business is the nation's leading small business association. A 
			nonprofit, nonpartisan organization founded in 1943, NFIB represents 
			the consensus views of its members in Washington, D.C., and all 50 
			state capitals. |