Daily Trade News

Inflation, labor and delta variant hit restaurant owners, Goldman


Restaurants around the county were looking ahead to the economy’s reopening over the last few months, as Covid vaccines became more widespread and pent-up consumer demand was palpable.

But headwinds from supply chain disruptions to a labor shortage and rising costs are hitting the industry as the contagious delta variant clouds hopes of a return to normalcy.

Food, restaurant and hospitality small business owners are more worried than most about the pandemic’s continued disruptions to operations, according to new data from the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Business Voices program. The data find 84% of owners in these sectors are concerned about the impact of rising Covid-19 infection rates on business, compared with 75% of the overall small business population.

Nearly all have seen an increase in operating costs, with 93% saying inflationary pressures have risen since June, having negative effects on finances.

The data subset of 117 food, restaurant and hospitality owners comes from a broader survey of 1,145 participants in the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses program earlier this month.

The figures underscore the sustained pressure facing restaurants even in an economy that has rebounded from the worst of the damage inflicted by the coronavirus. While the rollout of vaccines and looser public health restrictions have moved the industry closer to normalcy, challenges abound as restaurant owners look toward the fall.

Ruby Bugarin, who runs Margaritas and Pepe’s restaurants in the greater Los Angeles area, said both the availability of goods and higher costs have hit her businesses. Products like crab are more challenging to find, chicken and pork costs have risen more than $1 per pound, and prices of other goods have soared.

“The past two or three weeks the price of avocados have gone from about $40 a case to $85 a case. So that’s more than double,” Bugarin, a member of the Small Business Voices program, said. “We can’t do the same thing to our customers — we raise prices once or twice a year.”

Labor costs are also rising at her two restaurants, which together have 63 employees. Bugarin said she would like to add a cook or two at each location, but instead is paying her current staff overtime weekly.

Labor challenges have also hit restaurant, food and hospitality owners like Bugarin at higher rates than seen in the broader small business community. The data show 79% of those business owners say workforce challenges have worsened since before the pandemic, compared with 64% overall.

Recent data from the National Federation of Independent Business underscores the labor issues weighing on small business optimism. Unfilled job openings were above the 48-year historical average in August for the second month in a row.

“In June, 67% of small businesses, despite inflation, despite the workforce challenges, said they thought the U.S. was headed in the right direction,” said Joe Wall, national director of Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses Voices. “That…



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