Skip to content
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

WASHINGTON, Jan 8 (Reuters) – U.S. small business sentiment

clawed back from a 2-1/2 year-low in December, but owners’

assessment of the labor market remained downbeat, a survey

showed on Tuesday.

The National Federation of Independent Business said its

optimism index edged up half a percentage point to 88 last

month, the second lowest reading since March 2010. The index hit

a 2-1/2 year-low of 87.5 in November.

The December survey does not capture the 11th hour deal

reached in the U.S. Congress to prevent a raft of sharp cuts in

government spending and higher taxes, or the fiscal cliff, that

could have drained about $600 billion from the economy at the

start of the year.

“Having some certainty about tax rates and some ‘tax

extenders’ will provide some relief to owners, but doesn’t

guarantee a more positive forecast for the economy,” the NFIB

said in a statement.

“The January survey will sort this out – will higher taxes

and spending cuts be viewed as a ‘positive’?”

Labor market gauges worsened last month, with only a net 1

percent of small business owners saying they planned to create

new jobs. There was a slight drop in the share of owners

reporting that job vacancies were hard to fill.

“More owners expect their real sales volumes to be lower in

the first quarter than predict higher sales and more owners plan

to reduce inventories than plan to add to them,” said the NFIB.

It said capital spending remained in ‘maintenance’ mode,

while plans to make capital outlays remained at recession

levels.