Dublin, October 15, 2018
Dublin, October 15, 2018
The number of new business and company start-ups decreased by -7% in the first three quarters of 2018 (1 January—30 September).
The figures, published today by business and credit risk analyst Vision-net, a CRIF company, suggest that Ireland’s fast rate of business growth may be entering a more mature phase of growth.
Limerick was the only county in the top five to record an increase of more than +0.5% in the first nine months of the year, with company start-ups increasing by +15% (632 vs 549). Dublin, while the most popular county for new start-ups, recorded only a small increase of less than +0.5% (7,659 vs 7,635).
Conversely, insolvencies declined by -23% in Q1-Q3 2018 compared to the same period last year, indicating that established companies are maturing, able to service their creditors, and operating well in their markets.
New business and company start-ups decreased by -7% in Q1-Q3 2018 compared to the same period last year (33,439 vs 35,911). In Q3 2018 alone, new business and company start-ups decreased by -10% on Q3 2017 (10,343 vs 11,520).
Professional services and social and personal services were the only two industries in the top ten to record an increase in start-ups (respectively, +3% (1,066 vs 1,035) and +16% (696 vs 602)).
Finance start-ups decreased by 6% (803 vs 858) and construction start-ups decreased by 4% (543 vs 565).
All of the top five counties for company start-ups recorded decreases. Dublin recorded the most company start-ups (2,475) but this was a -4% decrease on the same period in 2017. Limerick, ranked fifth, recoded the smallest QoQ decrease (-2%, 186 vs 190).
Company insolvencies decreased by -23% in Q1-Q3 2018 compared to the same period last year (596 vs 777). In Q3 2018 alone, company insolvencies decreased by -9% on Q3 2017 (207 vs 228).
Read more on www.crif.ie