Hundreds of businesses in Pembrokeshire shut their doors for the last time in 2021 as closures across the UK reached their highest level since 2017, new figures show.
Office for National Statistics figures show 825 business in the county closed in 2021 more than double the 390 the year before.
It was also up from 385 in 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic hit.
Business leadership group the Institute of Directors (Iod) said that, while businesses open and close all the time, the uncertainty caused by the coronavirus pandemic had ‘complicated’ the business landscape across the country.
Nationally, 327,000 businesses closed in 2021 – a nine per cent increase on the year before and the highest number since 2017.
Kitty Ussher, chief economist at the IoD, said businesses are constantly opening and closing, particularly sole traders undertaking casual work – including delivery couriers, which saw a boom during the pandemic – and self-employed people conducting freelance work.
These are included in the official statistics and are more likely to be created or closed in a short period of time, Ms Ussher added.
The transport, storage and postal industry had the highest business birth rate, at 26%, and death rate, at 22%.
No other industry had a rate for either higher than 16%.
Although 825 business in Pembrokeshire closed last year, 520 new businesses were also opened in the county.
This meant a total of 5,265 businesses were active in Pembrokeshire in 2021 – up from 5,130 the year before.
Pembrokeshire also had around 20 high-growth businesses in the area – meaning the annualised growth in the number of employees of the business over the last three years is at least 20 percent.
Around 550 of the county’s enterprises employed 10 or more staff.
Ms Ussher said that last year’s picture was complicated by the impact of the pandemic, which not only led to a temporary increase in unemployment and so increased the number of people looking for freelance work, but also caused a change in consumer spending patterns that affected different parts of the economy in different ways.
"All of this led to particularly high churn rates as the economy adjusted in 2021," she said.
Ms Ussher highlighted the rise in business births in 2021, suggesting this shows the economy is beginning to recover from the pandemic.
Across the country, 360,000 businesses began trading last year – a 9% increase on the 333,000 the year before and the highest since 2016.
The IoD added that the majority of new and closed businesses were sole traders – of the 327,000 total business deaths in the UK last year, just 82,000 had two or more employees
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