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Small firms and the COVID-19 insolvency gap

Author

Listed:
  • Julian Oliver Dörr

    (ZEW Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research
    Justus Liebig University Giessen)

  • Georg Licht

    (ZEW Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research)

  • Simona Murmann

    (ZEW Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research)

Abstract

COVID-19 placed a special role on fiscal policy in rescuing companies short of liquidity from insolvency. In the first months of the crisis, SMEs as the backbone of Germany’s economy benefited from large and mainly indiscriminate aid measures. Avoiding business failures in a whatever-it-takes fashion contrasts, however, with the cleansing mechanism of economic crises: a mechanism which forces unviable firms out of the market, thereby reallocating resources efficiently. By focusing on firms’ pre-crisis financial standing, we estimate the extent to which the policy response induced an insolvency gap and analyze whether the gap is characterized by firms which were already struggling before the pandemic. With the policy measures being focused on smaller firms, we also examine whether this insolvency gap differs with respect to firm size. Our results show that the COVID-19 policy response in Germany has triggered a backlog of insolvencies that is particularly pronounced among financially weak, small firms, having potential long-term implications on entrepreneurship and economic recovery. Plain English Summary This study analyzes the extent to which the strong policy support to companies in the early phase of the COVID-19 crisis has prevented a large wave of corporate insolvencies. Using data of about 1.5 million German companies, it is shown that it was mainly smaller firms that experienced strong financial distress and would have gone bankrupt without policy assistance. In times of crises, insolvencies usually allow for a reallocation of employees and capital to more efficient firms. However, the analysis reveals that this ‘cleansing effect’ is hampered in the current crisis as the largely indiscriminate granting of liquidity subsidies and the temporary suspension of the duty to file for insolvency have caused an insolvency gap that is driven by firms which were already in a weak financial position before the crisis. Overall, the insolvency gap is estimated to affect around 25,000 companies, a substantial number compared to the around 16,300 actual insolvencies in 2020. In the ongoing crisis, policy makers should prefer instruments favoring entrepreneurs who respond innovatively to the pandemic instead of prolonging the survival of near-insolvent firms.

Suggested Citation

  • Julian Oliver Dörr & Georg Licht & Simona Murmann, 2022. "Small firms and the COVID-19 insolvency gap," Small Business Economics, Springer, vol. 58(2), pages 887-917, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:kap:sbusec:v:58:y:2022:i:2:d:10.1007_s11187-021-00514-4
    DOI: 10.1007/s11187-021-00514-4
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    3. Josefine Hansson & Mikael Nordenmark & Åsa Tjulin & Bodil J. Landstad & Stig Vinberg, 2022. "Socio-Ecological Factors and Well-Being among Self-Employed in Europe during the COVID-19 Pandemic," IJERPH, MDPI, vol. 19(13), pages 1-13, June.
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    7. Kaya, Orcun, 2022. "Determinants and consequences of SME insolvency risk during the pandemic," Economic Modelling, Elsevier, vol. 115(C).
    8. Bersch, Johannes & Murmann, Simona, 2023. "Unternehmensdynamik in der Wissenswirtschaft in Deutschland 2021: Gründungen und Schließungen von Unternehmen, Gründungsdynamik in den Bundesländern, Internationaler Vergleich, Wagniskapital-Investiti," Studien zum deutschen Innovationssystem 3-2023, Expertenkommission Forschung und Innovation (EFI) - Commission of Experts for Research and Innovation, Berlin.
    9. Trunschke, Markus & Peters, Bettina & Czarnitzki, Dirk & Rammer, Christian, 2023. "Pandemic effects: Do innovation activities of firms suffer from long-Covid?," ZEW Discussion Papers 23-014, ZEW - Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research.
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