Page Title

Publications

To promote transparency and provide information, the Federal Planning Bureau regularly publishes the methods and results of its works. The publications are organised in different series, such as Outlooks, Working Papers and Planning Papers. Some reports can be consulted here, along with the Short Term Update newsletters that were published until 2015. You can search our publications by theme, publication type, author and year.

Short Term Update 01-10 : Special topic : The financial health of Belgian companies before the recent economic downturn [ Short Term Update 01-10 - ]

According to our February forecast, quarterly GDP growth should remain limited to 0.3% on average in the course of 2010, which is about half of the quarterly growth in the second half of 2009. This slowdown is in line with the international business cycle, which should temporarily lose momentum to the extent that monetary and budgetary stimuli fade and restocking comes to an end. In the course of 2011, exports should pick up and domestic demand should gain momentum, resulting in average quarterly GDP growth of 0.6%. On a yearly basis, Belgian GDP should increase by 1.4% in 2010 and 1.7% in 2011, after a drop of 3% last year. This means that real GDP should remain below its pre-crisis level until late 2011.

Net job losses reached 23 200 persons on average in 2009 and should add up to 46 100 this year. This trend should reverse in 2011, with a net creation of 8 600 jobs. Given the evolution of the labour force, the number of unemployed (broad administrative definition) should increase by 52 900 persons this year (after going up by 45 000 persons in 2009) and by almost 29 000 persons in 2011. As a result, the harmonised Eurostat unemployment rate (which is based on labour force surveys) is expected to reach 8.8% in 2011, compared to 7% in 2008.

Headline inflation in Belgium, as measured by yoy growth of the national index of consumer prices, was negative from May to November 2009, which was mainly due to the negative impact of energy prices. As a result, overall inflation remained just below zero in 2009. At the end of last year, the base effect of the drop in energy prices had disappeared. Combined with a gradual increase in oil prices, headline inflation should rise to 1.7% in 2010 according to our inflation forecast of March.

  Publication type

Closed series

Planning papers presented completed studies on topics of wider interest. The series has been closed since 2022.
The Short Term Update was a quarterly newsletter providing an up-to-date overview of the Belgian economy and the FPB's ongoing studies.  The series has been closed since 2015.

The financial health of Belgian companies before the recent economic downturn

With real GDP increasing by 2.9%, 2007 ended a four-year period of substantial economic growth in Belgium, before - as in most other countries - the global financial crisis of 2008 resulted in a dramatic economic downturn in 2009. The year 2007 therefore seems a good benchmark year for assessing the financial health of industries in good times, on the eve of a period of economic recession. Using data from the annual accounts of Belgian companies, the financial health or fragility of industries can be analysed through indicators that reflect the profitability, solvency and liquidity of companies. This has been done for manufacturing industries and non-financial market services (i.e. excluding insurance and financial companies). In 2007, some 10% of companies were performing poorly on the three indicators of financial health. These companies accounted for 2.7% of employment or 47 605 employees, indicating that, by and large, financially fragile companies are small. The financial fragility of some industries in 2007 may have foreshadowed the problems that they were to face with the economic recession in 2009, although this should be confirmed through future analysis, based on data for more recent years.

Profitability, solvency and liquidity

The ability of companies to make profits on a structural basis determines their long-term financial health and probability of survival as it reflects the degree to which they succeed in selling goods or providing services with a margin over costs that justifies the risk of the capital invested in the company.

As shareholders expect a premium for the risk they incur by investing their money in a company, equity is more expensive than debt financing at a fixed market rate. Leveraging through debt permits companies to increase their return on equity. However, debts imply costs and repayment, irrespective of the profitability of a company. If a company is overleveraged, it may no longer be able to repay its debts - even if it is profitable - and may thereby risk bankruptcy. It is therefore important to strike the right balance between profit-enhancing leveraging and financial independence and solvency.

The liquidity of a company reflects its ability to meet short-term obligations through its available income, e.g. cash flow or assets that can be sold on short notice. It can be considered as a solvency measure with regard to short-term debts. A company that is profitable and solvent can face liquidity problems, although under normal circumstances it should then be able to attract additional financing to repay its short-term debt. If companies fail to attract the money necessary to solve liquidity problems, as has been the case as a consequence of the global financial crisis, a liquidity problem may turn into a more severe solvency problem.

Financial health

Annual accounts for the year 2007 have been considered for a total of 275 839 Belgian companies (accounting for 1 738 163 employees): 8% in manufacturing industries, 14% in construction and utilities (water and energy) and 78% in services. On average, companies performed rather well in terms of profitability (75% of the companies were profitable in 2007) and solvency (63% of the companies met the norm of long-term solvency). Liquidity was somewhat more of a concern, especially for large companies, which faced a net current assets shortage of EUR 35.5 billion.

In Table 1 the financial health of 25 industries is summarised, based on the performance of companies with regard to profitability, solvency and liquidity.

The second column shows the percentage of companies in a given industry that performed well on the three indicators of financial strength (good), the third column the percentage of companies that did not meet the norm for one or two of the indicators (average) and the fourth column the percentage of companies that underperform on all three indicators (bad). The percentage of total employment in a given industry that was accounted for by companies in poor financial health (as given in the fourth column) is shown in the fifth column. This can be considered as an indicator of the extent to which industry employment was fragile. The last column shows total employment in financially fragile companies. The percentage of companies in poor financial health exceeds the percentage of fragile employment in all industries, which reflects the fact that fragile companies are predominantly small and therefore do not account for a large share of total employment.

[More in the publication...]

  Related documents

    None

  Consult data

None

  Themes

None

  JEL

None

  Keywords

None


Please do not visit, its a trap for bots