More than half of small European firms fear closure: McKinsey

One in 10 small and medium-sized firms in Europe expect to file for bankruptcy within six months, 55 percent in a year, the McKinsey survey found.

Italy restaurant
State measures across the region have kept thousands of struggling businesses afloat, but some are being wound down [File: Guglielmo Mangiapane]

More than half the small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which together provide jobs for two-thirds of European workers, fear for their survival in the coming 12 months, according to a survey released by management consultancy McKinsey on Thursday.

The survey was conducted in August, before the current acceleration in coronavirus cases across Europe that is forcing governments to impose new restrictions on activity and prompting speculation of fresh national lockdowns.

The finding comes as warnings multiply of an impending wave of business insolvencies and as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and others urge the region’s governments to boost state support to help companies weather the coronavirus pandemic.

The McKinsey survey of more than 2,200 companies in five countries – France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Britain – found that 55 percent expected to shut down by September next year if their revenues remained at current levels.

At the current trajectory, one in 10 SMEs were expected to file for bankruptcy within six months.

“This is a substantial burden on the financial sector,” report co-author Zdravko Mladenov said of just one of the knock-on impacts of such a development, which would also send jobless totals surging and stymie wider investment in the economy.

Economists polled by Reuters last month forecast that the euro area economy would grow by just 5.5 percent next year, after a fall of approximately 8 percent this year, but warned that even that patchy recovery was vulnerable to a further spread of the virus.

SMEs are defined as companies with 250 or fewer employees.

In Europe, they employ more than 90 million people, but their small size makes them vulnerable to cash flow crises. In Spain, for example, 83 percent of the 85,000 businesses that have collapsed since February employ fewer than five workers.

‘Whatever it takes’

State measures across the region, ranging from moratoria on bankruptcies to loan repayment holidays, have until now kept thousands of struggling businesses afloat. But as those measures are in some cases wound down, Germany’s Bundesbank and the Bank of England are among those warning of rising insolvencies.

“Policymakers need to do whatever it takes to contain the pandemic and its economic damage, and not withdraw support prematurely to avoid repeating the mistake of the global financial crisis,” the IMF said in its blog this week.

“For companies, policies now need to go beyond liquidity support and ensure that insolvent but viable firms can remain in business,” it added, citing measures to facilitate debt restructuring or make equity available to viable firms.

Source: Reuters