New Survey: Small Business Sentiment Stabilizes, Workers Are Falling Behind Financially; Employers Took On Debt to Survive 2023

Moscow, Idaho (Newsworthy.ai) Friday Jan 12, 2024 @ 12:15 PM Pacific โ€”

The January Freedom Economy Index, a joint survey of 70,000 small businesses by PublicSquare and RedBalloon, found that following wave after wave of economic turbulence, Americaโ€™s small businesses appear to be in a โ€œholding pattern,โ€ locking down expenses and taking a wait-and-see approach.

Key Findings

  1. The Good? Sentiment may be stabilizing. Wrong-track sentiment dropped ever-so-slightly to pre-November levels, and the number of business owners who believe weโ€™re headed into a recession is the lowest since our August survey.

  1. The Bad? Businesses and employees are financially stressed. 1 out of every 3 businesses had to take on more debt in 2023 to survive, and 70% of business owners say their employees and/or contractors are falling behind financially. Additionally, 60% reported that Christmas economic activity was below expectations, and 77% say they believe consumer confidence is still poor or bad.

  1. The Ugly? Inflation still lingers as 73% report that their supplier prices continued to increase in December, and 53% of businesses were forced to raise their prices yet again last month.

Key Quotes

โ€œDespite all of the bad news in 2023, Freedom Economy businesses stood firm,โ€ Michael Seifert, PublicSquare CEO, said. โ€œThis is a good sign for the broader economy since many of these businesses are on โ€˜Main Streetโ€™, theyโ€™re integral to their communities, and are seen as the lifeblood of our American economic environment. Their resilience causes optimism in me as we kick off 2024.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s a glimmer of hope that 2024 will be better for small businesses,โ€ Andrew Crapuchettes, RedBalloon CEO, said. โ€œTheyโ€™ve weathered high inflation, aggressive interest rates, and a tight labor market. Those that survived will be stronger moving forward.โ€

Detailed Results

70% of small businesses report that their employees and/or contractors are falling behind financially in this current economy.

37% of employers reported they had to take on more debt in 2023 to survive, while 53% said they had to maintain the same level of debt. Only 10% were able to reduce their debt load in 2023.

80% of small business owners say they plan to hold back from making any major capital purchases this year, and 65% say they are neither hiring nor reducing their staff.

Sampling of employer verbatim responses:

  • โ€œHolding steady, unless we get increased business. Then, will add staff.โ€

  • โ€œDesperately need to hire to operate effectively, but sales are so down that I don't know what to do.โ€

  • โ€œNo hiring. Just trying to keep the bottom line out of the red.โ€

  • โ€œI just lost my last employee the week before Christmas. Now I do everything. I don't have the money after taxes & fees to buy materials, let alone hire someone.โ€

  • โ€œDepending on outcomes, may have to layoff or close business.โ€

In another sign of locking down expenses, nearly half (44.3%) of small businesses say they are planning less business travel in 2024, while less than 10% say they are planning more.

When asked โ€œHow was the overall Christmas season economic activity,โ€ 41.3% said it was โ€œslower than normal,โ€ while another 27.7% said it was downright โ€œpoor.โ€

Another 59.7% report that the Christmas season economic activity was below their expectations, while only 4.1% said it exceeded their expectations.

Small business ownersโ€™ optimism about their businessโ€™s future remained steady rather than declining from November yet and much lower than the mid-summer numbers.

And, 76.3% say weโ€™re headed into a โ€œmajor recession,โ€ down 5 points from November, while another 14.69% believe weโ€™re headed to a minor recession and 7.6% say we will avoid recession but not grow.

93% still believe the US is on the โ€œwrong track,โ€ down slightly from the September/October highs.

Methodology

The Freedom Economy Index surveyed over 70,000 small business owners throughout the United States, fielding the questionnaire from January 4 to 10, 2024 with 964 respondents. The survey has a margin of error of +/-3.0% at the 95% confidence level.

Download the January report here.

To schedule an interview with PublicSquare CEO Michael Seifert and RedBalloon CEO Andrew Crapuchettes, contact Isaac Lopez at (208) 997โ€“8013 or isaac@redballoon.work.

PublicSquare Is Americaโ€™s largest nonwoke marketplace app with over 70,000 businesses and over 1.6 million active consumer members. They empower the consumers to put purpose behind every purchase, from daily essentials to non-woke restaurants in their area.

Founded In 2021, RedBalloon has quickly become Americaโ€™s largest woke-free job board, connecting employers and employees who prioritize a positive workplace culture free from the divisiveness of cancel-culture mandates.

This press release is distributed by the Newsworthy.aiโ„ข Press Release Newswire - News Marketing Platform.โ„ข

The reference URL for this press release is located here New Survey: Small Business Sentiment Stabilizes, Workers Are Falling Behind Financially; Employers Took On Debt to Survive 2023.

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