Majority of small US businesses continue to feel the heat from Covid-19

A poll found that the 62% of small business owners fear that the worst is still to come with Covid-19's economic impact

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Most small business owners in the US believe the worst of the coronavirus pandemic is still ahead of them, with half saying their operations would permanently close within a year unless the business environment improves, the US Chamber of Commerce said on Tuesday.

A new US Chamber-MetLife poll of small businesses taken from October 30 to November 10 showed that 74 per cent of the owners said they need further government assistance to weather the pandemic. That percentage rises to 81 per cent for minority-owned businesses.

The quarterly poll found that the 62 per cent of small business owners fear that the worst is still to come with Covid-19's economic impact. Only 40 per cent said they believe their small businesses can operate indefinitely during the current business environment.

"We must ensure small businesses across the country receive the assistance they need from the federal government," said Neil Bradley, the Chamber's chief policy officer. "Not passing the bipartisan compromise for temporary and targeted relief risks the permanent loss of tens of thousands of small businesses, financial hardship for millions of Americans, and unnecessary delays in combating the pandemic."

Democrats and Republicans in Congress are still wrangling this week over a new coronavirus relief package that would provide additional unemployment compensation and aid to small businesses and other sectors of the economy hit hard by the pandemic.

Mr Bradley said the quarterly survey found that 14 per cent of small businesses are currently planning to cut staff, up from 9 per cent in July and September. Staff reduction plans are back up to the 13 per cent level that the survey saw in April during the pandemic's first peak, he said.

The US extended its rollout of the first authorised Covid-19 vaccine on Tuesday, inoculating healthcare workers on the frontlines of a pandemic that has killed more than 300,000 people across the country.