The investment backlog in the middle sand hinders company successions. This is because German SMEs are getting on in years and are jeopardising their competitiveness by holding back on investments. According to a study, only one in three entrepreneurs over 60 invests.
German entrepreneurs are ageing at an impressive rate: currently more than 1.3 million owners of small and medium-sized enterprises are 55 or older. The Kreditanstalt vor Wiederaufbau (KfW) warns of this in a new Study underlining the warning of an imminent demographic trap in the German economy.
Age of company owners is rising rapidly
On average, a boss in the SME sector was last 51 years old. Compared to an average age of 45 in 2002, this is a significant increase. The trend - and thus the investment backlog - will intensify significantly in the next five years, as the baby boomers are then slowly approaching retirement.
KfW warns that the willingness to invest, which decreases with age, endangers the competitiveness of German SMEs. Lower investment jeopardises future business success and also reduces overall economic growth, putting jobs at risk.
Investment backlog reduces enterprise value
At the same time, this investment backlog has a very practical effect on the private balance sheet of entrepreneurs: The value of your company decreases because the competitive strength and thus the future viability of the company declines due to lower investments.
Axel Bergmann, a management consultant from Hanover who specialises in company successions, sees this development very critically for potential company successors: ‘While on the one hand the purchase prices of the companies are falling, financing the purchase prices is likely to prove more difficult due to the poorer earnings expectations resulting from an investment backlog?
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