Two CPA decision-makers at trucking companies in the Midwest have pretty much the same outlook on the nation’s economy and their businesses: They are buoyed by lower fuel costs and increasing demand, but a driver shortage is keeping them from being able to haul every load a customer wants.
  Their sentiment sums up key themes found in a new survey by the AICPA: The view is generally positive, but there is rising concern about the availability of skilled personnel.
  The fourth-quarter Business & Industry Economic Outlook, released Thursday, shows gains across all nine indicators in the CPA Outlook Index (CPAOI). U.S. economic optimism, one of the indicators, is up 22 points from a year ago to 78. Projections for profit (up 10 points since the fourth quarter of 2013) and employment (up nine points) also show widespread optimism, helping the overall CPAOI hit 78 (see chart below). A reading above 50 indicates a generally positive outlook.
  Regulation, including implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, P.L. 111-148, continues to be the top obstacle for businesses, according to the survey of 830 finance executives. Just behind regulation is concern about the availability of skilled personnel, a concern that was rated sixth on a list in the fourth quarter of 2013.
  Finding good workers is a concern at Melton Truck Lines in Tulsa, Okla., where Melissa Ruby, CPA, is the controller. She said that 10% of Melton’s trucks are unused because the company is having a hard time finding and keeping drivers.
  “We don’t have a truck for every call that we get,” Ruby said. “We don’t have somebody that can go and pick up that load. Obviously, there’s a lot of opportunity cost when you’ve got those trucks parked against the fence.”
  She cites the boom in oil and natural gas, and an uptick in construction, as reasons that drivers have left recently. Some drivers are taking jobs in those industries instead.
  But Melton is taking steps to not only keep the drivers it has but also attract others. One way is through regular pay increases and other incentives, Ruby said. Another is by building a new corporate headquarters and highlighting its amenities. Among the features of the 77,000-square-foot facility is a 3,500-square-foot fitness center, including a section for women only. The company’s website has a portal for viewing live construction updates.
  Good benefits and competitive pay are offered to offset the time demands of truck driving.
  “We ask our drivers to be out on the road for three weeks at a time,” Ruby said. “We’ve got to make it worth their while to stay out on the road that long.”
  That’s similar to retention and recruitment strategies at Nussbaum Transportation Services in Hudson, Ill., where the new company headquarters is a selling point. “People say it feels like a Colorado resort,” said CFO Bill Wettstein, CPA, CGMA.
  The company moved into the building about a year ago and views it as part of its growth strategy. Nussbaum has annual revenue of $60 million, and Wettstein projects revenue to grow 20% in the next year.
  “Our employees definitely want to come to work in this building,” Wettstein said. “We try to send a message to our workers and our vendors and customers that we have a high standard of excellence in everything that we do.”
  Like Melton, Nussbaum is seeing high demand for its services—in freight industry parlance, capacity is tight. That’s a reason Wettstein is optimistic about the economy.
  Health care optimism
  Another optimist is Stephen Ure, the CFO at Supplemental Health Care, a staffing company in Park City, Utah. While implementation of the new health care laws is proving to be a regulatory headache, Ure said the law’s existence means hospitals are staying busy and hiring more of his company’s doctors, nurses, and therapists.
  “Our business has had its ups and downs, but right now, it’s pretty good,” Ure said. “The hospitals are doing well, and when they’re doing well, they hire.”
  Optimism among health care providers is rising, according to the survey, which showed 37% optimism in the fourth quarter of 2013 and 65% optimism in the fourth quarter this year.
  Ure said the company has struggled to hold on to some IT employees as salaries in that field have risen. Finance demand has also increased, but so far the company hasn’t lost too many finance workers.
  “When we grow and have to add people, it’s hard for us to find” qualified finance staff, Ure said.
  Growth is a theme of this quarter’s survey, where 71% of respondents said they expect their business to expand in the next 12 months, compared with 62% who felt that way a year ago.
  Fifty-one percent of companies say they have the right amount of employees, a decrease of 6 percentage points from a year ago. Twenty-three percent say they have too few employees and plan to hire, compared with 13% who said that in the fourth quarter of 2013.
  Other findings
  Other key findings in the survey:
  Revenue is expected to grow 4.7% and profits 3.9% in the next year, compared with projected revenue growth of 3.6% and profit growth of 2.7% a year ago. Revenue and profit projections have risen or remained steady for the past eight quarters.
  Businesses expect staffing to rise 2.1% in the next 12 months, compared with a staffing expectation of 1.2% a year ago. Companies plan to pay more as well, increasing expected salary and benefits by 2.5% in the next year, compared with 2.2% in the fourth quarter last year.
  Expected health care cost increases are at 5.9%, a drop from the previous quarter and previous year projected increases (6.6%).
  Companies report projected rises in spending on marketing, research and development, and employee training.
  Optimism in the construction industry is at 78%, compared with 67% in the fourth quarter of 2013. Most other sectors had small rises in optimism.
  Technology is the only sector with less optimism now than in the fourth quarter of 2013. It saw the biggest drop in optimism, to 50% from 69% a year ago.
 
  來(lái)源:AICPA China