Small Businesses Hanging By A Thread
Costs are rising, profits are shrinking and the ability of the big guys to keep prices relatively lower is drawing away customers. Things are so bad that many small enterprises, which account for about 99% of the country’s businesses, say they are hanging by a thread that may soon snap.
In barely a year, the cost of pork has jumped by 50 cents a pound, while beef is up 20 percent; a five-gallon jug of canola oil that used to cost $15 is at $40; a 50-pound bag of flour jumped from $7 to between $20 and $25. And then there are fuel surcharges of between $5 and $9 that have been added to nearly all deliveries during the past six months. As gas and food prices climb, consumers are bypassing small businesses and seeking out bargains in places like Costco Wholesale Corp., which reported a 32% jump in its fiscal third-quarter profit, surpassing Wall Street expectations.
In the meantime, wages haven’t grown and the job market is tepid, at best. On Friday, the Labor Department said the nation’s unemployment rate jumped to 5.5% in May — the biggest monthly rise since 1986. While no data is available on how many small businesses have gone under in the past six months, federal officials are reporting a decline in the number of loans they guarantee.