The trend is unmistakable: trading environments, both globally and in the majority of advanced economies, are becoming more vulnerable. And it is a pattern that businesses ignore at their peril.
Around the world, the average increase in business insolvencies accelerated from +23% in 2022 to +29% in 2023, according to the Global Insolvency Outlook from Allianz Trade. And there is no let-up – at least for now: the early months of 2024 show the pace of bankruptcies rising at above pre-pandemic levels.
The causal factors are complex (see Recipe for a rise in insolvencies), but to give the figures a historical context: they represent the greatest rise in business failures since 2009 when the global financial crisis was still in full flow and annual bankruptcy rates were rising at +33%.
What is surprising about the current momentum is its reach. In three out of four countries worldwide, the number of business insolvencies jumped in 2023, with most recording a double-digit increase. The main exceptions were emerging markets, principally the BRICS countries. When those are rolled into the calculation, the Allianz Trade Global Insolvency Index shows an increase of +7% year-on-year, up from +1% in 2022.
The picture in North America was particularly notable, with the US recording a surge in business insolvencies of +40%. Though less turbulent, Western Europe remained a key contributor to the global trend, with an uplift of +15%.