- Up to 30% of UK Indian restaurants may struggle to reopen after COVID-19 – putting thousands of venues and tens of thousands of jobs at risk.
- The traditional cheap curry night out is over, certainly in the medium term, because venues will no longer be able to pack diners in.
- To survive, remaining curry houses need to raise prices to a realistic level to offset the fall in revenues from less crowded restaurants.
Thousands of the UK’s curry houses could struggle to reopen after COVID-19, according to an experienced restaurateur and a leading academic on small business in the latest podcast from Aston Business School.
Shahab Uddin, who owns Streetly Balti in the West Midlands, said he reckoned as many as 30% of big venues could fall victim to the pandemic if they are no longer able to pack their diners in.
The impact “could actually be worse” according to Professor Monder Ram, Director of the Centre for Research in Ethnic Minority Entrepreneurship at Aston Business School, unless venues invested and raised prices to realistic levels.
The estimates mean up to 2,500 out of around 8,500 Indian restaurants might never reopen, potentially leading to 30,000-plus job losses. The figures were revealed in episode two of a podcast series called ‘Aston means business: SMEs adapting to COVID-19 challenges’, presented by journalist Steve Dyson.
Mr Uddin, who’s been in the curry house trade since 1993, explained that Streetly Balti had accessed the government’s furlough support and a £10,000 local council grant, and that his and some other curry houses had developed takeaway services to tick-over in the short-term.
But he warned that damage to the wider industry had been more severe because many operators had no knowledge of assistance available, and grants were not enough to tide larger venues over.
Mr Uddin said: “80% of Indian restaurants in the UK are Bangladeshi owned … The thing about Bangladeshi restaurateurs is that most haven’t had any real, formal education and they’re struggling.”
“One of my friends who’s a landlord says the people renting the restaurant off him just up and left – they closed the business down. If they’d applied for the furlough payments [and] grant they would have been okay. They clearly didn’t know so they closed the restaurant.”
“I’ve a lot of friends who have big restaurants on the high street with massive rates. The grant is not going to help them – their expenses are very high. If this goes on for another two or three months, some are stressing: ‘Are we really going to open again?’. The debt they’re going to accrue [means] it’s going to be difficult for them to continue. Having talked to friends up and down the country, I’m estimating at least 25% to 30% of bigger restaurants are not going to open again.”
“The longer this goes on, the harder it’s going to get. We [the sector] have shot ourselves in the foot. Pricing is a big issue, especially in the Balti belt in Birmingham, because they’ve built a whole industry on being cheap and cheerful. That’s not going to work with COVID-19 [and] if they’re not adjusting menu prices they’re going to struggle a lot. To survive they need to start pricing correctly.”
Mr Uddin added: “My restaurant is quite small – we’ve built our reputation on being small and cosy. After COVID-19 I don’t think cosy and small is going to work. Until we’re allowed to open the restaurant, I’m going to stick to takeaways, and if I have any customers who really want to come to the restaurant maybe just allow one or two tables. I wouldn’t risk taking any more than that.”
Professor Ram said he was not surprised at Mr Uddin’s comments because he felt the curry house sector was facing dire challenges even before COVID-19.
He explained: “The estimate [of closures] that Shahab’s given isn’t out of line with industry estimates – it could actually be worse. The sector’s facing so many challenges. The trend is for more adventurous eating, so you’ll see lots of Vietnamese, Turkish and Mexican restaurants – even large chain stores getting into the act.”
“Supermarkets are one of the most prolific sellers of curries and large chains of pubs and restaurants are also entering this market, [and] these problems of competition and newcomers have been accentuated by COVID-19.”
“A group of friends going out for a lively evening of entertainment finished off with a curry is part and parcel of the British way of life. If you take that away you’re taking away the very essence of what going out for a curry means.”
Prof Ram also agreed that many curry house owners had not tried to access government assistance because they often shied away from what they saw as formal public sector institutions. But he insisted there was a possible future if more operators upgraded services and prices.
He said: “COVID-19 is providing paradoxically a brilliant opportunity to reflect on the business models that traditionally Bangladeshi caterers have used. There has been very little investment in new tech and very little in skills. Organisations like my own need to get much closer to people like Shahab and collaboratively develop solutions [they] might follow.”
“The traditional model in this sector has always been low tech, low wages and low prices. This is unlikely to survive in the future and major changes will have to be introduced. Shahab and others are saying we need to explore radical new options like investing significantly in training and taking IT/digital ways of marketing seriously.”
▪ ‘Aston means business: SMEs adapting to COVID-19 challenges’ can be found at https://www2.aston.ac.uk/aston-business-school/podcast.
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- Notes to editors
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