The North Country Chamber of Commerce has released the results of its 2023 Annual Issue Survey, defining the position of regional business on a number of key issues and expressing expectations for the year ahead.
"We said a year ago that if inflation, workforce and supply chain challenges persisted, they would have an effect on confidence and expectations and we are seeing that," says Chamber President Garry Douglas. "The Business Confidence Index in 2022 was 90%, with 71% expecting their business activity to be up and 19% expecting it to remain steady. For 2023, we are still at a positive level of 80%, with a majority of 51% anticipating business growth with 29% expecting no change. That shift is definitely tied to continued strong challenges in terms of rising costs, a very tight labor pool and expectations that 2023 may see a national recession or slowdown."
Douglas notes, however, that while a small regional majority still expects growth and only 20% expect business to be down, 69% believe the New York State economy will be down this year and 71% believe similarly for the national economy. 62% believe that if there is a recession this year, "our economic region has positioned itself better than most rural regions of New York." "The fact that confidence is higher about our region than about the state and nation is welcome," says Douglas, "and reflects such factors as strong employment, the return of Canadian visitors and investment, the expected growth in much of our area manufacturing base including transportation equipment, and being in the businesses we now are in."
At the same time, the Chamber points to several key issues, some of which have been major concerns for two years:
Overall, the priorities for action on the state level this year are:
On the federal level this year, 95% call for the U.S. and Canadian governments to focus on further coordinated progress toward normalization of border crossings, aiming for restored 2019 levels of travel. Other findings include:
Priorities for federal action this year are:
The Chamber's 2023 Issue Survey results have been shared with federal and state officials and will be used to help guide the Chamber's advocacy efforts in the coming months in Washington, Albany and elsewhere.
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