Two-thirds of Japan's smaller firms' sales still below pre-COVID level -survey

Reuters

Published Aug 24, 2021 08:34AM ET

Updated Aug 24, 2021 08:52AM ET

By Kantaro Komiya

TOKYO (Reuters) - Almost 68% of small and medium-sized Japanese companies posted lower sales in July than in the same month of pre-pandemic 2019, according to a survey by credit research firm Tokyo Shoko Research released Tuesday.

At the same time, 57% said they no longer needed emergency injections of cash.

The two readings highlight how hard a sector that employs about 70% of Japan's contracted workforce excluding farming and fishing is finding it to thrive after, rather than survive during, the pandemic, and by extension COVID-19's lasting impact on the world's third-largest economy.

Japan's government has pumped trillions of yen into the private sector since the start of the pandemic, with small and medium-sized businesses the biggest beneficiaries.

That package helped cut corporate bankruptcies by 7.2% in 2020 to 7,773, a three-decade low, according to a Tokyo Shoko Research survey released in January.

However, in a currently uneven recovery in which face-to-face service sectors are lagging significantly behind manufacturers, more companies are seeking help with turnarounds toward a post-pandemic economy, said Tokyo Shoko's research division director Mitsuhiro Harada.

In Tuesday's survey, covering 10,385 companies and conducted between Aug. 2 and 11, 5.6% said they would consider total revamps of their businesses, including liquidation of debts with or without a court supervision - plans that often require debt-minimizing efforts.

"The government's initial relief scheme (for small and medium-sized businesses) was about injection... after injection of money," Harada said.