Wed. Dec 18th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Australians are being told to brace for a tidal wave of businesses going bust, and the job losses that may come with that, with a leading credit agency reporting a 20 per cent surge in small firms at risk of not paying their bills.

Fifty-eight-year-old April Brodie runs a beauty salon in a shopping complex in Melbourne.

She’s losing customers because they’re prioritising other types of spending.

Beauty salon owner April Brodie.
Beauty salon owner April Brodie says her shopping complex business is struggling, but a service for wealthier clients is booming.(Supplied: April Brodie)

“People are struggling and there’s definitely a difference in people’s spending habits,” she says.

“You know when people would come [every] four weeks, maybe they will come eight weeks now, or they’ll stretch things out to three months.

“People will often say to you, ‘I just can’t afford it, you know we’ve just got extra bills, I can’t afford it.’

“Whereas years ago, pre-pandemic, you would never hear people say that.”

She says suppliers to small businesses are now getting nervous about being paid, and as a result, they’re setting stricter rules.

“There’s a lot [who have] gone from 60-day accounts or 30-day accounts to where you have to pay up-front.

“As someone who’s been in the industry a long time, I’ve never experienced that before but now it’s a lot of pay up-front.”

20 per cent rise in small business at risk of failure

Data from illion shows suppliers are right to be nervous.

The credit risk firm monitors how well businesses are coping with their bills.

illion’s Commercial Risk Barometer tracks the risk of Australian businesses being unable to trade within the next 12 months with money owing and forced into closure – this includes businesses entering liquidation and/or being involuntarily deregistered.

In other words, it looks at how long businesses are taking to pay their invoices, to get an idea of how close they are to collapse.

The longer they take to pay, the more they’re struggling.

A Steveway Real Estate "For Lease" sign in a shop window.

There are concerns that a record number of small businesses will cease trading during the coming year.(ABC News: Peter Healy)

Its latest report shows hundreds of thousands of businesses are showing an elevated risk of failure.

For example, food services businesses are now paying invoices 18 days late on average, construction firms and retail businesses 14 days late, and the transport sector 12 days late.

“So many of those businesses where they are at the whim of consumers, discretionary spending, times are tough at the moment,” illion’s head of modelling Barrett Hasseldine said.

“Costs are high and consumers are really thinking twice about whether or not they do need to make discretionary spends.

“And so it’s those types of businesses which are really feeling the brunt of it.”

Source link