New York City’s Asian-American small businesses, a key driver of growth pre-pandemic, are now facing one of the longest roads to recovery.
A lack of access to financial relief—often inaccessible in Asian languages—technology barriers and a surge in anti-Asian hate crimes are hampering a return to normalcy for many restaurants, salons, groceries, laundries and other services that were among the first hit at the onset of the Covid-19 crisis.
Race &Recovery
Read more in our series on the economic recovery in minority communities across the U.S.
Limited English proficiency rates among self-employed Asian New Yorkers
Laundry services
Nail salons
Beauty salons
Food services
Taxi and ride share
Limited English proficiency rates among self-employed Asian New Yorkers
Laundry services
Nail salons
Beauty salons
Food services
Taxi and
ride share
Their firms suffered early on, as customers shunned Asian stores when the new coronavirus first spread in China, and were helped the least by government aid, according to a report from the nonprofit Asian American Federation (AAF). In Manhattan’s Chinatown, where many enterprises are Asian and immigrant-run, storefronts are shuttered. The neighborhood sits next to big offices and courts that normally provide a vital stream of customers.
While activity has come back as the city reopens, workers and tourists have still not completely returned. Local foot traffic remains below 2019 levels, according to SafeGraph data.
“Clearly if you’re working from home, you’re not coming to downtown business districts. Across the board, restaurants are not doing well,” said Wellington Chen, executive director of Chinatown Business Improvement District.
Before the pandemic, Asian-American small businesses made up 20% of New York City’s businesses and were the fastest-growing segment of the group.
Drop in consumer spending, 2019 to 2020
NYC overall
Jackson Heights
Drop in consumer spending, 2019 to 2020
NYC overall
Jackson Heights
Consumer spending in Manhattan’s Chinatown and Flushing, a large Asian neighborhood in Queens, declined about six weeks before New York went into lockdown in March 2020, according to Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth. By early March, spending in these neighborhoods had dropped more than the rest of the city. Over half of Asian-owned companies said their revenue dropped 75% or more last year, according to the AAF report.
Many also lack digital payment and online delivery capabilities that helped other businesses when in-person dining was restricted. In New York City, 24% of transactions in grocery stores and restaurants were digital in 2020, but only 3% were digital in Asian-American communities, according to Mastercard.
The hit to businesses meant many in the community lost their jobs. The number of Asian Americans claiming state unemployment benefits in New York rose by over 4,000% from May 2019 to May 2020—nearly three times the increase for the state overall.
Jobless Surge
The increase in Asian claimants has been higher than other groups
Percent change
from prior year
There were more than 200,000 Asian claimants in May 2020
Percent change
from prior year
There were more than 200,000 Asian claimants in May 2020
Percent change
from prior year
There were more than 200,000 Asian claimants in May 2020
Across the U.S., Asian Americans with less education struggled during the pandemic. In California, 83% of Asian Americans with high school education or less filed unemployment claims by last July, compared to 37% for the general population with the same level of education, according to research from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Some owners say there hasn’t been enough of an improvement since. At Sichuan Hot Pot in Chinatown, partner Yong Zhong Lim offers a glimpse at the hardships that many of those businesses face.
One weekday evening, he greeted the few passersby in front of his Manhattan restaurant—a far cry from the once-crowded Pell Street. Lunch hours are slow too. Before the pandemic, Sichuan Hot Pot had three delivery workers during lunchtime. In early autumn, it was sharing two delivery workers with five other restaurants.
“I don’t mind hard work,” said Lim. “But there isn’t even a chance to do hard work.”
Rising food prices are a strain for Sichuan Hot Pot, in Manhattan’s Chinatown.
Photographer:
Amy Yee/Bloomberg
Rising food prices are a strain for Sichuan Hot Pot, in Manhattan’s Chinatown.
Photographer: Amy Yee/ Bloomberg
Rising food prices are a strain for Sichuan Hot Pot, in Manhattan’s Chinatown.
Photographer:
Amy Yee/ Bloomberg
Rising food prices are a strain for Sichuan Hot Pot, in Manhattan’s Chinatown.
Photographer:
Amy Yee/ Bloomberg
Rising food costs, supply-chain bottlenecks, and lingering fears of the delta variant further strained the eatery in recent months. There are other pressures too. Sichuan Hot Pot closed its outpost in Flushing, due to rising rent. And as hate crimes against the Asian community have spiked during the pandemic, restaurant staff commute home together for safety. Worries about anti-Asian bias were widespread among the 800 Asian-American business owners surveyed by AAF.
The local recovery remains relatively weak compared to pre-pandemic levels, with foot traffic still down as much as 30% in Chinatown and 50% along Main Street in Flushing, Queens, the area’s main drag and transportation hub, according to a Bloomberg analysis of SafeGraph mobile phone location data.
Covid’s impact on New York’s Asian small businesses
Share of survey respondents that reported:
Revenue loss:
Covid’s impact on New York’s Asian small businesses
Share of survey respondents that reported:
Revenue loss:
It’s a similar situation in other parts of the country. Asian-American businesses surveyed in Southern California this spring reported greater losses during the pandemic than companies in the region overall. And 60% of Asian-owned businesses nationwide missed out on financial aid because owners did not believe they were eligible, according to a survey this year from the National Asian/Pacific Islander American Chamber of Commerce and Entrepreneurship.
In south Flushing, around 1,000 borrowers received federal Paycheck Protection Program loans in 2020—an estimated rate of 10%. In a few wealthier parts of the city, the acceptance rate was closer to 50%. While the latest round in 2021 was explicitly geared at lower-income neighborhoods and communities of color, heavily-Asian zip codes saw at most a modest increase in loan acceptance rates. (An analysis last July by RentHop found a similar 2020 trend.)
Shoppers on a street in Flushing, Queens.
Photographer:
Gabriela Bhaskar/ Bloomberg
Shoppers on a street in Flushing, Queens.
Photographer:
Gabriela Bhaskar/ Bloomberg
Shoppers on a street in Flushing, Queens.
Photographer:
Gabriela Bhaskar/ Bloomberg
Shoppers on a street in Flushing, Queens.
Photographer:
Gabriela Bhaskar/ Bloomberg
Shoppers on a street in Flushing, Queens.
Photographer:
Gabriela Bhaskar/ Bloomberg
“Even though Flushing is one of the most concentrated small business centers, it isn’t acknowledged as such and doesn’t receive the support that our community deserves,” said John Choe, executive director of the Greater Flushing Chamber of Commerce.
Local Differences
Zip codes with large Asian populations received smaller loans than the city overall, except for Manhattan’s 10013, which includes wealthier neighborhoods like Tribeca and parts of SoHo
$20,100
New York City median
PPP total median loan amount
10013 Chinatown (and Tribeca)
10002 Chinatown (and Lower East Side)
11354 Flushing
11220 Sunset Park
11355 Flushing
$20,100
New York City median
PPP total median loan amount
10013 Chinatown (and Tribeca)
10002 Chinatown
11354 Flushing
11220 Sunset Park
11355 Flushing
PPP total median
loan amount
$20,100
NYC median
10013 Chinatown (and Tribeca)
10002 Chinatown (and Lower East Side)
11354 Flushing
11220 Sunset Park
11355 Flushing
Many Asian-American businesses lacked relationships with mainstream banks or were not eligible for PPP loans in the first place. Some don’t have formal payrolls because they are staffed by owners and family members. And others, especially immigrant-owned small businesses, often rely on cash and paper-based bookkeeping, making it difficult to get extensive documentation required for government aid applications. Many hired costly accountants to help navigate the process.
“There are a lot of cases where owners have been burned,” said Ahyoung Kim, AAF’s associate director of small business programs.
Kent Zhang would’ve closed his Chinatown restaurant if he hadn’t received government aid.
Photographer:
Amy Yee/Bloomberg
Kent Zhang would’ve closed his Chinatown restaurant if he hadn’t received government aid.
Photographer: Amy Yee/Bloomberg
Kent Zhang would’ve closed his Chinatown restaurant if he hadn’t received government aid.
Photographer: Amy Yee/Bloomberg
Kent Zhang would’ve closed his Chinatown restaurant if he hadn’t received government aid.
Photographer:
Amy Yee/Bloomberg
For many, getting that cash infusion was the difference between staying open or shuttering entirely. Kent Zhang, owner of Bodhi Kosher Vegetarian in Chinatown, managed to line up a PPP loan. “Otherwise this restaurant would close,” he said.
But the Vietnamese restaurant next to his wasn’t able to do the same and shut down, he said. “So many restaurants are permanently closed.”
For Asian-American businesses already hanging by a thread, it’s a tough path forward.
“Quite a number of restaurant owners did not survive this pandemic,” said James Chen, owner of Blink Marketing, a shop in Flushing that prints menus for many local eateries.
The ones that remain are still struggling, he said. “They don’t know where is the end of the tunnel.”
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October 28, 2021 at 05:00PM
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New York Asian-American Small Businesses Struggle After Covid - Bloomberg
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