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Economic Development

Insolvencies hit 'record low' in 2021, business support firm says

Furlough and other Government support schemes during the pandemic are credited with keeping many companies afloat

Going out of business sign on shoe store window(Image: shared content unit)

A record low number of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ firms are set to have fallen into administration in 2021 despite the heavy toll of the pandemic, according to industry experts.

Insolvency specialists at Interpath Advisory said furlough measures particularly reduced the number of non-voluntary insolvencies over the year but warned there could be a rise next year.

Latest figures from the advisory firm, which was spun off from KPMG and bought by HIG Capital earlier this year, revealed 618 administrations in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in the 11 months to November.

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This is expected to increase by the end of the year but will remain significantly short of the 1,121 from last year and the record low of 1,044 in 2015.

Blair Nimmo, chief executive at Interpath, told the PA news agency that extensions to financial support measures, including furlough, meant much fewer companies collapsed than expected at the start of the year.

"It hasn't been how we would have predicted this time last year," he said.

"Assumptions were based on the fact the support would phase out as originally planned, so in the end we had much less insolvency activity in the second and third quarters than we would have thought.