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    Japan's ramen bars struggle to stay open as COVID hammers small firms

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    Japan's ramen bars struggle to stay open as COVID hammers small firms

    Noodle bars are particularly prone to the economic malaise the pandemic triggered


    Published:  November 24, 2020 21:10 Reuters  and  Compiled by Nathaniel Lacsina, Senior Web Editor

    1 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    Tokyo: Sixty-year-old Yashiro Haga is folding his Tokyo noodle ramen shop after 15 years in December, unable to overcome the prospect of a lasting customer slump due to the coronavirus crisis. Image Credit: Reuters
    2 of 12
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    "The flow of people has changed due to the coronavirus," Haga said, standing behind the counter of his ground-floor shop, Shirohachi. "Customers aren't coming in and queuing up outside shops any longer." The pandemic is damaging Japan's "mom-and-pop" restaurants - including noodle shops like Haga's - at a growing rate, despite evidence the government's massive effort to stave off bankruptcies is working in other sectors of the economy. Image Credit: Reuters
    3 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    Hurt by deflationary pressures and growing competition in the run-up to the now-delayed Tokyo Olympics, noodle bars are particularly prone to the economic malaise the pandemic triggered in the service sector. Small and mid-sized businesses like Haga's noodle bar employ about 70% of Japan's workers and account for 99.7% of the total number of enterprises, according to government data, leading some to worry that a COVID-19 resurgence could trigger an increasing number of layoffs among small firms. Image Credit: Reuters
    4 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    While overall bankruptcies among firms with at least 10 million yen ($96,228) in liabilities in the six months to October fell 5.2% from a year earlier, those among restaurants rose 4.5%, data from private credit company Teikoku Databank showed. Image Credit: Reuters
    5 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    Bankruptcies among restaurants with less than 10 million yen in liabilities were up by 137% for the same period, Tokyo Shoko Research, a firm that monitors similar data, said, while the total for the service-sector, including restaurants, rose 64.4%. But industry insiders expect that is just the tip of the iceberg, as local shops often close up with no official filing. Image Credit: Reuters
    6 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    "Many ramen shops won't appear in any figures when they're closing down because they're small, privately owned businesses," said Haga, who has gone without salary since April. Hiroaki Nakazawa, a 42-year-old pharmacist who has frequented Shirohachi for about a decade, said he felt sad about its closure. "There's only one place like this." Image Credit: Reuters
    7 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    At least seven other noodle stalls in the central Tokyo area popular with tourists where Haga has his table-less shop, which seats nine people at the counter, have already closed since March this year. Nationwide, 34 ramen businesses with at least 10 million yen in liabilities went bankrupt during the first nine months of 2020, also a record high for the period, Teikoku Databank said. Image Credit: Reuters
    8 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    Another reason why experts say statistics underestimate the true impact of the pandemic on ramen shops is that winding down is expensive due to requirements from landlords to leave the stores stripped down after a six-month notice period. "There are many firms with a lack of cash flow," said Manabu Shintani, CEO of Actpro Co, a property intermediation services provider. Image Credit: Reuters
    9 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    Among noodle shops, the first to fold this year were those whose businesses were already on knife-edge before COVID-19, often run by elderly owners, said Takeshi Yamamoto, an independent ramen critic who tracks shop closures. Those were followed by a wave of noodle chains closing outlets, and now some places with younger owners are shutting down, said Yamamoto, who has eaten at more than 10,000 noodle shops. Image Credit: Reuters
    10 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    He estimated that the real number of ramen shops shutting down nationwide was about 290 in October and November alone. The spate of closures has helped some. Actpro's platform for matching businesses looking to shut down with firms hoping to move into the location being vacated has been a hit. Image Credit: Reuters
    11 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    Once a match is made, a restaurant owner and the incoming owner negotiate with the landlord, cutting costs. The company has seen the matchings quadruple to about 70 to 80 a month after the crisis started taking its toll, Shintani said. Shirohachi's Haga used about $29,000 in government subsidies to get through until his closure. Image Credit: Reuters
    12 of 12
    Ramen bankruptcy gallery
    A sign board reading 'We will be closing down our business on December 10. I very much appreciate all your support of my dream over the last fifteen years.' He tried offering his noodles through takeout but was unable to make up for the income he lost after office workers' visits fell due to work-from-home restrictions. "Even among the most popular places, sales from takeout aren't exceeding" the sales drop from the crisis, ramen critic Yamamoto said. Image Credit: Reuters

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