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Tough times for Japan's curry shops as surging rice prices fuel bankruptcies

Tough times for Japan's curry shops as surging rice prices fuel bankruptcies

A record number of curry shops in Japan went out of business in the past year, as purveyors of one of the country's most beloved dishes took a hit from
soaring rice prices
Thirteen curry shops with more than 10 million yen (US$70,000) in debt filed for bankruptcy in the year ending in March – marking a record high for the second consecutive year, according to a report from Tokyo-based research firm Teikoku Databank. The total number of bankruptcies is likely much higher when considering smaller family-run shops, Teikoku said.
Prices of mainstay ingredients in Japanese curry – such as rice, spices, meat and vegetables – have gone up due to a rice shortage, adverse weather and a weak yen, the report said. Higher energy prices have also dented the profits of shop operators.
Japanese curry, a thick brown sauce containing meat and vegetables, is usually served on a bed of rice. A basic curry rice dish, a classic comfort food, now costs 365 yen (US$2.50) – a record high, according to Teikoku.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's government has been scrambling to combat skyrocketing rice prices in
Japan by releasing stockpiles of the staple ahead of a summer election.
01:24
Japanese shoppers scramble for cheap government-issued rice amid shortage crisis
Japanese shoppers scramble for cheap government-issued rice amid shortage crisis
During the coronavirus pandemic, takeaway and delivery orders had fuelled a curry boom – that has now also slowed and hurt sales for curry shops, Teikoku said.

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