We are only a couple of weeks into 2022 and it is already shaping up to be another challenging year for America’s 5.5 million family businesses dealing with the coronavirus pandemic. Rampant inflation, supply chain bottlenecks, and acute worker shortages continue.
Family businesses are vital to America. According to the Conway Center for Family Business, they account for two-thirds of our nation’s GDP, over 60 percent of U.S. jobs, and 78 percent of new jobs created.
They’re really resilient and nimble. Family businesses, particularly those which are third or fourth generational, have learned from experience to survive through hard times, says Jos? Liberti, a professor of finance at Northwestern University.
One of many which have dealt with stressful times for nearly a century is the Moriguchi Family. They own and operated Uwajimaya, a chain of Asian grocery and gift markets, which employs more than 400 people in Seattle, Bellevue, Renton and Beaverton, Oregon.
Their family business legacy dates back to 1928, a year prior to the beginning of the Great Depression. Fujimatsu Moriguchi opened a store in Tacoma which grew out his fishcake sales to Japanese farmers, loggers and fishermen at worksites.