Tue
Aug 14 2007
2nd Quarter Economic Indicators
Posted by Ricki Steigerwald under Micro-Biz News, Trends
Summary of SBA, Office of Advocacy, Second Quarter, 2007: The Economy and Small Business (PDF)
Although the economy grew, small business owners and consumers have a more pessimistic outlook.
- The economy grew an annualized value of 3.4% in the second quarter - most of the growth is in net exports and private investments of non-residential construction.
- The NFIB optimism index fell to 96.0 in June and hiring plans for small businesses faded. (The historical average for this index is 100.2. )
- The economic and business mood seems to reflect higher energy costs and the housing slow down.
- Unemployment rate is 4.5% which means businesses are still finding it hard to fill open positions. Every industry except construction, manufacturing and retail trade gained jobs during this quarter.
- Short term interest rates stayed relatively the same.
- The current Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey shows that the demand for small loans has weakened and banks are tightening their standards for small commercial and industrial loans.
- The core annualized inflation rate (does not include food and energy) grew 2.3%.
- The overall consumer price index grew by a annualized 5.2%. A significant portion is due to higher energy and food costs. The cost of West Texas crude oil was up nearly $7/barrel since March.




