War It's time to stop feeling sorry for restaurants - Or, what journoshits really think of you

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/544795-its-time-to-stop-feeling-sorry-for-restaurants?amp (Archive)

One of the saddest business stories that came out of the 2020 pandemic was the impact that mandated shutdowns had on the restaurant industry. News reports across the country covered frustrated business owners who were forced to comply with restrictions that limited their ability to serve their customers indoors or even at all. By summertime, reports began appearing of more than 16,000 restaurants closing nationwide, a number that ballooned to as many as 110,000 by the end of the year.

Did 110,000 restaurants fail in 2020? Perhaps. But hold on.

The fact is that restaurants fail at a higher rate than most small businesses. That's why, according to industry reports, 60 percent of restaurants don't make it past their first year, and 80 percent go out of business within five years. Currently, there are about 660,000 restaurants operating in this country. So, if 80 percent of them go out of business in five years, that would be a rate of about 105,000 restaurants shutting their doors every year.

In a recent speech, President Biden said that more than 400,000 small businesses overall have closed this past year. But hold on again.

According to the Small Business Administration (SBA), there are about 30.2 million small businesses in the U.S., of which 5.9 million actually have employees. The SBA reports that anywhere from 7 to 9 percent of those 5.9 million employer firms go out of business every year. Breaking it down, that comes to as many as 531,000 failed firms annually.

In other words, lots of small businesses - especially restaurants - close every year, regardless of global pandemics.

Yes, it's been a very difficult year for the restaurant industry. But you know what? The ones that remain are going to be just fine. In fact, many will probably emerge in better shape than before. That's because, despite the rules from governments that required those businesses to curtail their operations, those same governments actually stepped up to provide a lot of assistance. And smart restaurant owners took advantage.

What kind of help did the industry receive?

For starters, the Paycheck Protection Program launched a second round late in 2020 that not only specifically targeted the restaurant industry but also changed its loan calculation to make more funds available for them. The new rules also expanded the definition of forgivable expenses to include costs such as food contracts and investments in all those outdoor dining setups that provided more protection both for workers and customers. Hundreds of thousands of restaurants nationwide took advantage of these added benefits.

Besides the much-needed Paycheck Protection Program, many smart restaurant owners also took (and continue to take) advantage of the other generous federal pandemic benefit programs, such as the Employee Retention Tax Credit (which offers significant refundable credits on payroll taxes for eligible businesses that retain their employees) and the Economic Injury Disaster long program offered by the Small Business Administration. Restaurant owners in low to moderate income areas also snapped up targeted grants from the SBA. Or they made use of grant programs provided by delivery services such as Grubhub, DoorDash and Uber Eats or states like California and Illinois.

Across the country, cities and states issued rules that suspended rental payments and launched rental assistance programs that impacted countless smaller restaurants. For example, and thanks to the federal stimulus, my hometown of Philadelphia has offered as much as $100 million in aid to small businesses in the city - the majority of them restaurants - that included substantial assistance to help pay for rent. Other cities and states such as California and Oregon have done the same. Getting this kind of governmental help to pay for what is for many restaurant owners their biggest fixed overhead cost has been a crucial factor in their survival.

Besides that assistance, many cities - like Philadelphia as well as Dallas and Boston - have eased permit restrictions and allowed their restaurants to build makeshift eateries on the sidewalks and streets outside their establishments. Equipped with heaters and air ducts, those tables have been filled throughout the winter with intrepid diners desperate for a night away from Netflix. New York City has already announced its intentions to allow restaurants to continue with their outdoor dining, and a number of cities are considering the same. Which means that once the pandemic is behind us, many of these establishments will have found their capacity increased by 50 or even 100 percent, a huge revenue opportunity in the years to come.

But the biggest source of aid is yet to come. With the American Rescue Plan Act, the federal government has now stepped up to provide a massive grant program to restaurants called the Restaurant Revitalization Fund. This $29 billion grant fund, which is not yet accepting applications, will literally reimburse restaurateurs for the loss in revenues they experienced in 2020 compared to 2019. That's going to be a big check once the program is up and running.

When walking around downtown Philadelphia during the fall and winter, I worried for the future of all the restaurants around me. Many of them were shut, even boarded up. But now, as the weather warms, cases subside and vaccines increase, I'm noticing that those same small businesses - dormant for many months - are slowly coming back to life. Those owners were smart enough to have hoarded cash, negotiated suspended deals with suppliers and grabbed all the funding available for them. And many of them who pivoted to online sales, deliveries, curbside pickup and new, specialized offerings have discovered new revenue streams that will benefit them going forward.

I'm not arguing that this past year wasn't a historic catastrophe for many in the restaurant industry. But the industry has survived, and with all the funding available, the smartest owners of these businesses are putting themselves in a position to benefit from the pent-up demand and savings from the past 12 months.

So, let's not feel bad for these people. Let's eat.

Gene Marks is founder of The Marks Group, a small-business consulting firm. He frequently appears on CNBC, Fox Business and MSNBC.
________
 
I knew this guy was a left wing hack before I even looked him up on Wikipedia.

I lost track of how many restaurants closed out here and contrary to this nonsense none of them with under a year old.

There's a steak house that I know has been open for at least the last 20 years and it closed it's doors a few months pack. Pretty much all the remaining Pizza Huts, but the biggest hit were all the unique mom and pop stuff.

Gene Marks is a columnist, author, and small business owner. A past columnist for both The Washington Post and The New York Times, Gene writes regularly for The Hill, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Forbes, Inc. magazine, Entrepreneur.com, The Washington Times and The Guardian.[1]
 
The fact is that restaurants fail at a higher rate than most small businesses. That's why, according to industry reports, 60 percent of restaurants don't make it past their first year, and 80 percent go out of business within five years. Currently, there are about 660,000 restaurants operating in this country. So, if 80 percent of them go out of business in five years, that would be a rate of about 105,000 restaurants shutting their doors every year.

...If all restaurants in the country started 5 years ago then those numbers would check out.

Most arn't so they don't.

How did this get published?
 
This might be the most frustratingly dishonest "BUT ACKSHULLY" article I've ever had the misfortune of skimming.

You know what? He's right, a lot of businesses fail without a government instituted lockdown.

You know what also happens? More businesses failing when the government imposes nonsensical restrictions on your business being open, and makes you dependent on Government Time for bills and rent that run on Actually Running A Business Time.

Fuck this guy I hope he chokes on his five masks and shits his pants as a result.
 
Well, excuuuuse me, I thought I was supposed to be "supporting muh local businesses" or else I'd be considered some sort of establishment capitalist bezos white-adjacent bootlicker.

Yeah, tell that to all the long-running mom-and-pop businesses that have permanently shuttered for good and/or have had their buildings completely demolished for luxury high rises. Coming back to life, my ass.
 
It's time to stop feeling sorry for journalists.
Did journalists lose their jobs in 2020? Yes, but hold on.
 
It's this kind of dishonest shit that makes me want journalists to be up against the wall. As much as this faggot loves to cite numbers and statistics, you know they'd scream to the high heavens about gun control; even if you were to bring out all the numbers that show gun violence is actually really small. I also notice how they skipped over the part where the government was paying out something like $800/week, so a lot of those in the service industry would make far more money by staying home and not working. So even those businesses who got the government money (which they had to show went to employees, to keep them working), their employees didn't want to go back to work. This asshole skips over so many other problems to just dust his hands and say "So what."
 
I'm not arguing that this past year wasn't a historic catastrophe for many in the restaurant industry. But the industry has survived, and with all the funding available, the smartest owners of these businesses are putting themselves in a position to benefit from the pent-up demand and savings from the past 12 months.

UberEats and DoorDash do not count. Automation is still a thing, even when we’re heading under an economic inflation.
 
I think all restaurants should shut down and all the useless manchildren learn how to cook their own goddamn food.
 
Man, fuck that, restaurants are great.

Nothing beats being able to get out of your house, sit down in an environment devoted to food and escape your troubles of the outside world for a while, it's not all just about the food, it's also about the atmosphere, that's what eating at home, as perfectly nice as that can be as well of course, lacks.

I've not eaten at a restaurant since 2019 and it fucking sucks, I miss them.
 
Fuck restaurants.
Never mind that there's over 15 million restaurants in the world, each one hiring 3 people on average which totals at 45 million jobs.
Never mind that the population of Canada is only 37 million.
Fuck all those people, it's time to stop feeling sorry for them.

What you need to feel sorry for is the lack of LGBT representation in movies and video games, that's the important shit.
 
There should be a national registry of people and businesses should actively refuse service to these people. Make them suffer.
 
They want you dead, your business bankrupt, your kids raped, brainwashed and trans and they think it's funny.
Amazing how many people post bullshit without reading or comprehending the article. Restaurants only exist because of lazy people who can't or won't eat marginally healthy.

The fact that a lot of fast food "restaurants" are some of the few places that registered sex offenders have no trouble finding employment is reason enough not to feel sorry for them - and if a person claims they can't work anywhere but a restraint, then they're either lying or a registered sex offender themselves.

Oh, and fuck the so-called "working" class as well (as idiotic as such a term is to begin with in the 21st century) - most of them are just trash with no ambition or morality and are in their "position" because they can't keep their penis in their pants and have 5 kids with 5 different partners by age 17; to pretend to compare their "situation" to starving babies in Ethiopia or North Korea or something like that is beyond disgusting.
 
Amazing how many people post bullshit without reading or comprehending the article. Restaurants only exist because of lazy people who can't or won't eat marginally healthy.

The fact that a lot of fast food "restaurants" are some of the few places that registered sex offenders have no trouble finding employment is reason enough not to feel sorry for them - and if a person claims they can't work anywhere but a restraint, then they're either lying or a registered sex offender themselves.

Oh, and fuck the so-called "working" class as well (as idiotic as such a term is to begin with in the 21st century) - most of them are just trash with no ambition or morality and are in their "position" because they can't keep their penis in their pants and have 5 kids with 5 different partners by age 17; to pretend to compare their "situation" to starving babies in Ethiopia or North Korea or something like that is beyond disgusting.

lol take your top hat off and get laid my nig
 
These are the same people who'll get you thrown off Twatter if you tell them "Learn to code."
 
The fact is that restaurants fail at a higher rate than most small businesses.
So this brainlet's argument is... THEY WOULD HAVE FAILED ANYWAY? What did one user say? Deny them service. Yes so much yes.
400,000 small businesses overall have closed this past year. But hold on again.
I hate that. "But hold on." No compassion, no argument, no effort. Space taker at it's best. It does not surprise me from The Hill though.
And smart restaurant owners took advantage.
Hear that people who take a risk? You're stupid.
Or they made use of grant programs provided by delivery services such as Grubhub, DoorDash and Uber Eats or states like California and Illinois.
You mean services that FUCK OVER restaurants and give NOTHING to people who deliver the food? You are also citing Commifornia (who LITERALLY lets movie studios be open while squeezing the little guy?), and Illinois who has the SLOWEST recovery from the states around it?
many restaurant owners their biggest fixed overhead cost has been a crucial factor in their survival.
Considering your site advocates for "efficient" automation I would not be surprised if you took glee that people out of high school (TONS of people in high school and out of high school use those jobs as a starting point). Fuck it though. They are stupid.
eateries on the sidewalks and streets outside their establishments.
Then you might as well keep your place closed or just drive through. I can take my food to go if I have a choice between that and home.
New York City has already announced its intentions to allow restaurants to continue with their outdoor dining
How DELICIOUS. I can smell the shit and piss while a rat crawls on my leg. Delicious.
called the Restaurant Revitalization Fund. This $29 billion grant fund, which is not yet accepting applications
We have not spend the previous money. Sure though, sure. We will own nothing and be happy about it.
Those owners were smart enough to have hoarded cash, negotiated suspended deals with suppliers and grabbed all the funding available for them.
This reads like a person talking down to people. Fuck this guy.
the smartest owners of these businesses are putting themselves in a position to benefit from the pent-up demand and savings from the past 12 months.
Look this journo is talking down to people who want to climb out of the slop. I hope he realized that also includes Black, Mexican and Asian people. If I had a Twitter I would call him racist for claiming people that had lower overhead costs Tennessee v New York. For insight on this look up Louis Rossman on how much money it takes to rent in New York.
Did journalists lose their jobs in 2020? Yes, but hold on.
And nothing of value is lost. This is the new age of media. It cannot die fast enough. Nobody believes their propaganda anymore. Now anyone with a camera can do the same thing they do for a fraction of the money.
 
Back
Top Bottom