JEFFERSON CITY – NFIB’s May jobs report found that 34 percent (seasonally adjusted) of small business owners reported job openings they could not fill in May, unchanged from April, and the lowest since January 2021.
“Amid uncertainty, small business owners’ hiring plans remain subdued in May,” said Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg. “Compensation pressures have also eased offering some much needed relief for many owners.”
Although state-specific data is unavailable, NFIB State Director Brad Jones said, “The lack of qualified applicants remains an ongoing challenge for Main Street businesses. Our members say they’re ready to hire, but the right applicant hasn’t walked in the door yet.”
Overall, 55 percent of small business owners reported hiring or trying to hire in May, down one point from April. Forty-eight percent (86 percent of those hiring or trying to hire) of owners reported few or no qualified applicants for the positions they were trying to fill. Twenty-nine percent of owners reported few qualified applicants for their open positions and 19 percent reported none.
Thirty percent have openings for skilled workers (up one point) and 13 percent have openings for unskilled labor (unchanged for the fourth consecutive month).
Job openings were the highest in the construction, transportation, and manufacturing sectors, and the lowest in the wholesale and professional services industries. The percent of job openings in all industries except for wholesale have decreased from last year.
A seasonally adjusted net 12 percent of owners plan to create new jobs in the next three months, down one point from April.
The percent of small business owners reporting labor quality as their top operating problem fell three points from April to 16 percent. Labor costs reported as the single most important problem for business owners rose one point from April to 9 percent.
Seasonally adjusted, a net 26 percent of small business owners reported raising compensation in May, down seven points from April, and the lowest reading since February 2021. This was the greatest monthly decline since April 2020. A net 20 percent (seasonally adjusted) plan to raise compensation in the next three months, up three points from April.
See the complete NFIB report here: