From Deseret News archives:

Utah firms stay optimistic

Upbeat outlook belies some forecasts for '07

Published: Thursday, Dec. 7, 2006 8:43 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Utah business leaders are "cautiously optimistic" about the coming quarter, even as forecasters predict a slowing economy in 2007, according to a new report from Zions Bank.

The bank's Utah Quarterly Economic Forecast, conducted by research firm Dan Jones & Associates, surveyed 1,159 Utah business executives in early October. Of those, 29 percent of respondents rated their level of "optimism" a 9 or 10, on a scale of 1 to 10 (very pessimistic to very optimistic). That was down from second-quarter survey results to the same question, when 33 percent of respondents rated their optimism at that level.

"Our most recent study shows that executives from a variety of industries remain cautiously optimistic about effects of the economic climate on their businesses," Pat Jones, co-owner of Dan Jones & Associates, said in a prepared statement.

This is the second in what Zions envisions as an ongoing survey series. The first polled business leaders in July.

At that time, 16 percent of respondents said they believed their company's economic health would be "much better," compared to 17 percent in the newer poll, while 39 percent said they expected their company's economic health would be about the same, compared to 36 percent in the most recent survey.

Story continues below
A higher percentage (31 percent) of business leaders in the new survey said they anticipate spending less on capital expenditures, compared to 19 percent of respondents in the second-quarter survey. Twenty-five percent of respondents in the new survey said they planned to spend more.

Top concerns listed were:

  • Finding qualified employees.

  • The cost of health insurance for employees.

  • Keeping qualified employees.

Gas prices, which topped the list during the second quarter poll, fell to fourth place in the new survey.

"The big issue is where do you find people to hire, and this is especially true for small businesses," said Jeff Thredgold, economic consultant to Zions Bank and head of Salt Lake-based Thredgold Economic Associates. "They're frustrated in their inability to find people to hire and scared to death about losing their key people to competitors."

Which is a real concern, Thredgold said, given the state's historically low unemployment rate, last measured at 2.5 percent. Those concerns, along with rumblings from national economic forecasters about a possible recession in the coming year, likely have added the caution to business leaders' optimism, he said.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Obama to pledge 17% cut in CO2

Reading this blog gives us such relief that America will never turn away from...

Running game key to BYU offense

Ask Bonco. He says execution is the key. No really, he did. He's said it...

Budget cuts won't help in 2011

To Regretful, I'm right there with you. I don't understand how these guys...

Predicting the unpredictable: BYU wins

"There are no mysteries in today's battle between the Cougars and Utes." -...

Is deflation another word for devaluation? It seems to imply that....

Jazz involved in 4-team race

will Utah hang on to the 8th seed in the West? OKC plays HOU at home next as...

Letters: Global warming a plot

Oh, yes, some hacked e-mails completely explain why ice caps are melting,...

I love it when Danny Hazsard writes I often think he must have no life at all...

Letters: No constitutional right

Our founding fathers purposely framed the Constitution to be a flexible...

I can't imagine that subsidizing 100,000+ illegal immigrants and their...

Advertisements