Japan corporate bankruptcies highest in 5 yrs in wake of pandemic

The number of corporate bankruptcies in Japan for the first six months of 2023 rose 32.1 percent from a year earlier to a five-year high of 4,042, as businesses took on increased debt to stay afloat amid the coronavirus pandemic, a survey by a credit research company showed Monday.

The rise in failures involving liabilities exceeding 10 million yen ($70,000) comes as many companies have begun repaying interest-free and unsecured loans, which were extended by lenders under a government program in response to the pandemic, Tokyo Shoko Research Ltd. said.

Rising material and labor costs have also affected businesses, the research firm said.

In total, 322 of the cases involved companies that had been funded by the emergency program, almost doubling from a year before. Business insolvencies resulting from rising prices increased 3.3-fold to 300, according to the firm.

The number of corporate bankruptcies could increase further, especially among firms that have been slow to recover from the pandemic, the firm said.

The total liabilities left by bankrupt companies fell 45.3 percent to 934 billion yen in the six-month period, after surging last year due to an extraordinarily large debt held by Marelli Holdings Co., a major auto parts maker.

The company filed for protection with a court in June last year under Japan's civil rehabilitation law, with the debt it held amounting to 1.13 trillion yen.

© Kyodo News