º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Cardiff is the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ capital for new businesses

The city has the highest positive balance in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ between business births and deaths

Cardiff had a strong business birth to death 2021(Image: David Goddard/Getty Images)

Cardiff has the highest positive margin between new start-up firms and failures in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. Research by marketing training hub School of Marketing, based on ONS data, shows that in 2021 Cardiff had 72.14% higher business openings than closures.

The capital saw 3,460 start-ups compared to 2,010 business deaths. This meant that for every ten businesses that ceased trading, roughly 17 new ones started.

Next read: Huge take-up of office space in Cardiff.

Mansfield was ranked second, with 625 new businesses compared to 380 that closed in 2021. Wolverhampton came in third with 50.85% more new businesses than closures, with 1,780 business births and 1,180 deaths in 2021.

Bridgend was ranked ninth with a positive balance of just over 38%.







Rank





Region





2021 Business Births





2021 Business Deaths





Births/Deaths % Difference





Number of new businesses born, for every 10 that died





1



Cardiff



3,460



2,010



72.14%



17.21





2



Mansfield



625



380



64.47%



16.45





3



Wolverhampton



1,780



1,180



50.85%



15.08





4



Sandwell



2,140



1,460



46.58%



14.66





5



Ipswich



925



635



45.67%



14.57





6



Hull



1,345



925



45.41%



14.54





7



Broxtowe



580



410



41.46%



14.15





8



Darlington



590



425



38.82%



13.88





9



Bridgend



870



630



38.10%



13.81





10



Newham



3,570



2,625



36.00%



13.60

The study also found that º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-wide business openings were 4% higher than pre-pandemic numbers in 2019 with 386,200 new businesses in 2019 and 401,815 new businesses in 2021. Across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, 420,135 businesses closed in 2021, nearly 5% higher than the number of new companies formed in the same year.

Read Next: