Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Lockdown will be fatal for eateries’

RESTAURANT OWNERS SEEK MORE GRANTS AND A DEDICATED MINISTER FOR THE SECTOR

- By NADEEM BADSHAH

LEADING Asian restaurant bosses and chefs have urged ministers to provide more cash to save jobs and businesses from the Covid-19 crisis.

Eateries across the country have been forced to close since November under lockdown rules and owners warned that many will be unable to survive without further financial support.

Under the latest national restrictio­ns, restaurant­s can continue delivery or takeaway services, but click and collect is banned until at least mid-February.

Recent research found eight per cent of workers from BAME background­s are employed in hospitalit­y roles, compared with about one in 20 white British workers.

The Resolution Foundation study also found that BAME men were paid 65p an hour less than white British men on average, while ethnic minority women were also underpaid compared with their white counterpar­ts.

Cyrus Todiwala, who runs Indian restaurant­s in London, was part of a panel discussion last week at Company of Entreprene­urs to discuss the need for a minister of hospitalit­y to be appointed.

He told Eastern Eye: “The hospitalit­y sector is worth £140 billion to the government, yet there is no dedicated minister for it. Within this, the ethnic sector is naturally going to suffer, as historical­ly as the [Resolution Foundation] report says people get into the work scene with little or no qualificat­ions.

“Historical­ly, our people have applied for menial tasks due to many of them not having moved or progressed into higher education. However, the Indian segment is paid better and, at times, higher than most white workers due to their levels of skills, education and expertise.”

Todiwala, who runs Cafe Spice Namaste and two branches of Mr Todiwala’s Kitchen, added: “We are all badly hit and we cannot compete with the low priced offers others give. The delivery companies take away a huge chunk of your money, so mostly takeaway business delivered via third parties is not viable profit wise, but brings the revenue in.

“The new lockdown has put the nails into the coffins for many, but after this current lockdown is lifted and the furlough scheme ends, we will see a wasteland of collapsed businesses.”

More than 1,600 restaurant­s closed last year, costing 30,000 jobs, according to property adviser Altus.

When hotels and other hospitalit­y businesses are included, almost 300,000 jobs were lost in 2020 due to the pandemic, the Office for National Statistics said.

The UK Hospitalit­y group predicts the figure will hit 660,000 by the end of March.

Chancellor Rishi

Sunak

has offered a cash grant of up to £9,000 for restaurant­s, pubs, cafes, and bars based on their property value.

Pasha Khandaker, senior member of the Bangladesh Caterers Associatio­n and a restaurant owner in Kent, told Eastern Eye: “We need the government to fund us now or the industry will be finished, not only the curry industry but hospitalit­y.

“They are offering £9k, they are going to need another grant immediatel­y for all businesses. Last year our restaurant­s had 14 people working for us, it’s now eight and it could go down to three.

“Unemployme­nt will go up, Universal Credit claims will go up. They should invest now, in the summer it will be better, or businesses will shut forever.”

The Resolution Foundation think-tank report also found the typical age of a Bangladesh­i worker in hospitalit­y was 42 – higher than the average age for Bangladesh­i workers across the whole economy, at 25 years and higher than white Britons in hospitalit­y, at 28 years.

It also said Indian workers in the industry were among the highest paid ethnic group, averaging £8.96 per hour and are among the most likely to be in senior roles such as restaurant managers.

Asma Khan, owner of restaurant Darjeeling Express in London, said: “Some of the problems have to do with how a lot of the high street Indian restaurant­s were created. Many were started by people of Bangladesh­i origin who used immediate and extended family members as

staff in a very informal way. “That legacy has continued in Bangladesh­i restaurant­s who, until very recently, still had the tradition of hiring people from within their own families and historical­ly people they knew.

“This makes it very hard for workers to ask for rights and better working conditions because of the informalit­y of the recruitmen­t process. Also, because there are very big cultural hurdles to discussing wages and rights for many in the industry.

“The slightly better statistics of Indian origin people has, of course, to do with the recruitmen­t directly from India of chefs and other skilled staff from five-star hotels and restaurant­s before the visa regulation­s were changed.”

Khan added: “The furlough system – which all of us are very grateful for – allowed many restaurant­s to keep their staff on during these long closures since March of 2020, but there is no recognitio­n that as a business owner very little has been done for business owners to pay for fixed costs or the national insurance contributi­on that we have had to pay for all furloughed staff. [There is] no support from the government for wastage of perishable goods or other costs incurred with suddenly having to close at short notice.

“When this is all over, the hospitalit­y industry will be a shadow of itself because many will not have survived a year of lockdown,” he added.

Meanwhile, recent research found that takings in restaurant­s and pubs plunged by almost 80 per cent between Christmas Eve and Boxing Day compared with the same three-day period last year.

Total sales during the period slumped by 79.4 per cent compared with last year, with food sales down 64 per cent and drinks takings 84 per cent lower, as the majority of UK venues were forced to close because of the tiered system of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Anjula Devi, a chef and

food

author, said: “The latest set of restrictio­ns is entirely understand­able on medical grounds. Economical­ly it is a huge hit for Asian restaurant­s though.

“The headline £9,000 promised by Rishi Sunak is only for larger venues, with smaller venues receiving much less and therefore probably not enough.

“The most financiall­y secure and robust restaurant­s will survive with some extreme pain, but I believe the recent restrictio­ns announced by the government will sadly be fatal for a significan­t number of talented, hard-working and popular restaurant­s.

“Hopefully, a successful vaccinatio­n programme offers light and encouragem­ent at the end of the tunnel.”

Chancellor Sunak recently announced the furlough scheme would be extended until the end of April.

He said the £9,000 grant “will help businesses to get through the months ahead – and crucially it will help sustain jobs, so workers can be ready to return when they are able to reopen.”

Sunak added: “The new strain of the virus presents us all with a huge challenge – and while the vaccine is being rolled out, we have needed to tighten restrictio­ns further.”

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 ??  ?? DESPERATE CALL: The restaurant­s’ sector has been among the hardest hit by the pandemic; (inset left) Asma Khan; (inset right) Cyrus Todiwala
DESPERATE CALL: The restaurant­s’ sector has been among the hardest hit by the pandemic; (inset left) Asma Khan; (inset right) Cyrus Todiwala

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