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The number of insolvencies will rise sharpest in the USA (up 57 percent compared with 2019), Brazil and the UK. China is also expected to be hit hard.

Since many countries stopped requiring businesses which are insolvent to file for insolvency during the pandemic, the real cost to businesses will only unfold much later. Insolvencies are expected to actually fall as a result of these regulations in 2020 and pile on in 2021. 

Less of a burden is expected to be felt in Germany, where insolvencies are expected to be up by 12 percent in the coming year. Ron van het Hof, CEO of Euler Hermes in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, expects that the calm before the insolvencies storm will be over in the third quarter of 2020. “This time bomb will go off in the third quarter of the year at the latest and the shock waves are likely to spread into the entire first half of 2021,” van het Hof said. 

In Luxembourg, insolvencies were forecast to rise by 31% from 2019 to 2021.

Developed economies in East Asia, for example Japan and South Korea, will experience significantly fewer insolvencies as they avoided large scale and prolonged shutdowns. India, which is now the second hardest-hit country in the pandemic, is expected to also get off quite lightly.

This chart shows the projected increase of business insolvencies in 2021 compared with 2019 (in percent)

Originally published by Statista. The figure for Luxembourg was added by Delano.