Small and Medium Family Owned Enterprises in Germany
By Sam Vaknin
palma[at]unet.com.mk
http://samvak.tripod.com
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According
to a survey of German executives by the influential Ifo think tank,
German business confidence rose in January 2003 for the first time
in eight months - albeit imperceptibly, from 87.3 to 87.4. A poll
conducted by ZEW, another brain trust, confirmed these findings.
On past form, though, this confidence level heralds a contraction
of 5-6 percent in industrial production.
This is consistent with other dismal figures: negligible growth,
stiflingly high real interest rates imposed by the European Central
Bank, an export-discouraging strong euro and a disheartening surge
in unemployment to more than 10 percent. German woes are compounded
by a global recession, the evaporation of entire industries (such
as telecoms) and a sharp, universal decline in investments.
The main victims are the Mittelstand - the 1.3-3.2 (depending on
the definition) million mostly family-owned German small to medium
enterprises (SMEs). Of every 1000 German businesses, 997 are Mittelstand
by one liberal definition. The real figure is closer to one third.
Strict criteria reduce it to one in thirty firms.
These differences of opinion reflect the fuzziness of the concept
which has more to do with the style of ownership and management
and with a unique historic-cultural background than with objective,
economic yardsticks.
The Mittelstanders form the backbone and trusty barometer of the
German economy. They engage close to 22 million workers and apprentices
as well as well over 3 million "self employed" (owner-
employees) - 70 percent of Germany's total active workforce. More
than two fifths of all commercial turnover in the country are generated
by them as well as half the value added and one third of all exports.
The investment requirements of Mittelstand firms total $20 billion
annually. But access to capital is narrowing. Tottering local banks
are risk averse, the capital markets are lethargic, private investors
are scared and scarce. The Basle 2 capital adequacy requirements
will considerably increase the cost of bank loans to risky borrowers,
as are most Mittelstand firms.
According to a survey by Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau, the German
state-owned development bank, one third of all companies found access
to bank credits restricted in 2002. In the 12 months to March 2002,
German banks approved 7 percent fewer new credits. Listed banks
reduced lending by a debilitating one sixth.
According to The Economist, lending to Handwerk (craft) companies
declined by half between 1993-2003. Public sector savings banks,
hitherto the main source of Mittelstand financing, are hobbled by
an increasingly intrusive European Commission. The Neuer Markt,
touted as Germany's answer to NASDAQ, slumped by staggering 96 percent
and was merged out of existence.
The family is not what it used to be. Less than 40 percent of Mittelstand
businesses are handed down the generations nowadays. Many are forced
to introduce pesky outside investors and directors, or hired management.
The banks are far more inquisitive than they used to be. A traditional
long-term, epochal, business horizon gives ground to a quasi-American
focus on the tyranny of the bottom line. Capital spending, product
development and job security all suffer.
Founders are often to blame, unable as most are to calmly contemplate
their own death, or retirement and prepare a plan for orderly succession.
It is at these junctions of regime change that most business failures
occur, according to Sir Adrian Cadbury, author of "Family Firms
and their Governance".
According to Creditreform, quoted by The Economist, a record 37,700
companies went under in 2002. The Financial Times puts the figure
at 45,000. And 2003 witness another bumper crop. The figures, according
to the Institut für Mittelstandsforschung in Bonn, are even more
harrowing. In 2001, 386,000 startups were liquidated and 455,000
formed to yield 69,000 new firms.
New startup formation is at a low ebb. In 1991, net creations amounted
to 223,000, in 1995 - 121,000, in 1998 - 100,000. The picture is
especially grim in the east. About 129,000 net new startups sprouted
there in 1991. But the dilapidated east succeeded to spawn only
6000 a decade later with its bloated and venal construction sector
all but wiped out. Again, 2002 was only marginally better.
Half-hearted measures declared by the fragile coalition government
on January 6, 2003 - grandiosely titled the "Mittelstand Offensive"
- are unlikely to reverse the tide of red ink. Less red tape, more
generous financial support, simplified accounting and a fusion of
the country's cumbersome development banks will do little to help
the flood ravaged east, for instance, where crumbling domestic demand
cripples local entrepreneurship.
Eastern businessmen sorely lack management experience and skills.
Their networks of customers and suppliers are thin on the ground.
Most of them are single-product outfits. Successes are few and far
between and usually involve foreign equity-holders. Luckily, the
labor market in the east is more flexible than its ossified and
bureaucracy-laden western counterpart. Hourly labor costs - wages
plus inanely vertiginous and generous social benefits - are also
substantially lower in the eastern Lander.
An arthritic and worker-friendly regulatory framework and a pro-big
business tax regime have, indeed, burdened the Mittelstand. Still,
if anything, Germany's labor market has been liberalized under Chancellor
Schroeder's governments and tax rates went down across the board.
One must look elsewhere for the causes of the inexorable deterioration
of the country's SMEs.
It is remarkable that the decline of the Mittelstand coincides
with an unprecedented surge in small to medium scale entrepreneurship
in both developed and developing countries. It would seem that Germany
simply spectacularly pioneered what has become, decades later, an
economic fad.
Indeed, it is Germany's overwhelming success - its post-war industrial
miracle - that harbored the seeds of its decline and fall. Sated,
rich people make bad risk-taking entrepreneurs. Germany's unification
was its last attempt at rejuvenation. It failed because the west
chose to smother the east with an unrealistically priced Deutschmark,
a tangle of rules and regulations, an artificial construction bubble
and a forced liquidation of its industrial base.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it, goes German folk wisdom. On the
surface, everything functions impeccably: German infrastructure
is gleaming, its healthcare efficient, its environment pure, its
welfare unsurpassed. Why tinker with success? - wonders the average
citizen of this regional economic powerhouse. Only lately did a
few brave souls admit that the miracle has been consumed and that
Germany, unreformed, may be facing a Japanese decade.
Germany's second attempt at revitalization is unfolding outside
its borders. The enlargement of the European Union to incorporate
countries in central and east Europe is largely a German project.
Cheap labor, abundant raw materials, hungry, growing consumer markets
in the new members - promise to resuscitate the German industrial
sector.
Big German firms have taken note of this repossessed hinterland
and moved decisively - but not so the Mittelstand.
Preoccupied by their multidimensional crisis, they failed to colonize
the east. Battered by cost pressures, better-informed customers,
aggressive international competition, dizzying and costly technological
changes, spiraling needs for investment in R D, vocational training
and marketing - the Mittelstand companies are punch-drunk and more
xenophobic and self-destructively "independent" than ever.
One would be hard pressed to find a substantial Mittelstand representation
in the German drive to diversify abroad either by establishing a
presence in major export markets, or by sourcing from cheaper countries.
As the Center for Advanced Studies at Cardiff University notes,
Mittelstanders rarely out-source to key suppliers, maintain open-book
accounting, engage in simultaneous engineering, sign long-term contracts,
or reduce the number of direct suppliers as part of implementing
a lean production strategy.
Many SMEs function as family employment agencies rather than as
properly governed businesses. From hubs of innovation and early
adoption of bleeding edge technologies - the Mittelstanders have
lately become the bastion of paralytic conservatism. Most of them
support self-interested liberalization and deregulation. But few
would know what to do with these poisoned chalices, having become
far less competitive than they used to be in the 1970s.
So, is the Mittelstand sector doomed?
Not according to a report published in 2001 by the Institute for
Development and Peace at the Gerhard-Mercator University in Duisburg.
The authors believe that, despite all the shortcomings of the Mittelstand
business model, it could serve as a blueprint for the countries
of Latin America and other developing regions.
The Mittelstand have survived largely intact wars and devastation,
division and unification. There is no reason why they should not
outlive this second round of globalization - they did marvelously
in the first round, a century ago. But the government must recognize
the Mittelstand's contribution to the economy and reward these struggling
firms with a tax, financing and regulatory environment conducive
to job creation, innovation, ownership continuity and exports.
The reason for hope is that Germany is finally waking up. Universities
offer courses in family-orientated management. Offline and online
exchanges - such as EuroLink - connect German SMEs to willing private
equity investors, strategic partners and fund managers. Small business
service centers and one stop shops proliferate.
An army of consulting and trading firms proffer everything from
management skills to networks of contacts. Others peddler seminars,
Web design and Internet literacy syllabi. Software companies like
SAP, IBM and Sybase maintain special small business departments.
Think tanks and scholarly institutes devote increasing resources
to the SME phenomenon. There is even an Oscar award for Mittelstand
excellence.
Initiatives spring in the most unlikely places. DG Bank teamed
up with the German daily "Die Zeit" to "promote small
businesses who have innovative ideas". Mittelstand trade fairs
(for instance in Nuremberg last year) are well-attended. Venture
capitalists, portfolio managers and headhunters monitor developments
closely.
The Business Angels Network of Germany (BOUND) is a group of individual
investors who also contribute time and management know- how to fledgling
technology startups. Lobbying and advocacy groups, specialty publications,
public relations firms - all cater to the needs of German SMEs.
It looks less like a funeral than a resurrection.
Sam Vaknin
( http://samvak.tripod.com
) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and
After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist
for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline,
and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent,
and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories
in The Open Directory and Suite101. Until recently,
he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com
Published - November 2005
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