The Business Succession Crisis by Country: Where the Opportunities Are
16 min read
Across the developed world, baby boomer business owners are retiring at unprecedented rates, and most have no succession plan. This demographic wave creates a once-in-a-generation opportunity for ETA entrepreneurs and succession-focused acquirers. This guide maps the crisis by country, quantifies the opportunity, and identifies the best markets for searchers.
The global picture
- Scale: An estimated 10-15 million SMEs in OECD countries will change hands or close in the next decade due to owner retirement
- Value at risk: $10+ trillion in combined enterprise value
- Succession failure rate: 30-50% of businesses listed for sale never find a buyer and simply close
- Economic impact: Business closures destroy jobs, tax revenue, supply chains, and community infrastructure
- ETA opportunity: The gap between supply (retiring sellers) and demand (qualified buyers) is widening in every market
Country-by-country analysis
Japan, The most acute crisis
- Scale: 2.45 million SME owners over age 70 by 2025, ~1.27 million with no successor identified
- GDP at risk: ¥22 trillion (~$150B) in annual sales and 6.5 million jobs
- Government response: National policy priority. Japan Finance Corporation loans, tax deferrals, and the Business Succession Smoothing Act
- Challenge: Cultural preference for family succession, language barriers for foreign acquirers
- ETA opportunity: Highest volume of motivated sellers, lowest multiples (3-5x), but significant cultural and linguistic barriers
Germany, The Mittelstand Nachfolge
- Scale: ~600,000 Mittelstand companies need succession solutions by 2030
- Annual transfers: ~76,000 businesses per year, with 30% failing to find successors
- Government response: KfW financing programs, Bürgschaftsbanken guarantees, regional IHK (Chamber of Commerce) matching platforms
- ETA opportunity: World-class industrial and services businesses at 4-7x. Emotional sellers who care about employee welfare and company legacy
United States, The Silver Tsunami
- Scale: 4.5 million baby boomer-owned businesses (~$10 trillion in value)
- Timeline: Peak retirement wave 2025-2035
- Government response: SBA 7(a) program is the primary acquisition financing tool
- ETA opportunity: The deepest market with the best financing infrastructure. However, multiples are higher (4-7x) due to buyer competition
- See: Baby Boomer Succession Guide
France, La Transmission d’Entreprise
- Scale: ~70,000 business transfers per year, with 30,000+ at risk of closure
- Demographics: 700,000 business owners aged 55+ with no identified successor
- Government response: Bpifrance (the most generous government program in Europe), CCI matching, Réseau Entreprendre mentoring
- Tax incentives: Dutreil pact (75% exemption), retirement seller CGT exemption
- ETA opportunity: Best combination of financing support, tax incentives, and moderate multiples (3.5-6x)
Italy
- Scale: ~400,000 businesses need succession by 2030. Strong family-ownership culture means many owners delay planning
- Challenge: Limited M&A infrastructure for sub-€5M deals. Broker network is less developed than France or Germany
- Opportunity: Northern Italy manufacturing (3-5x multiples) with world-class product quality
Canada
- Scale: ~76% of Canadian small business owners plan to exit within 10 years, but only 10% have a formal succession plan
- Value: $1.5 trillion CAD in business assets expected to change hands
- Government response: BDC succession financing, LCGE tax exemption (~$1M CAD)
- ETA opportunity: Similar to the US but smaller buyer pool and lower multiples (3.5-6x)
United Kingdom
- Scale: ~5.5 million SMEs, with aging owner demographics similar to the US
- Challenge: No dedicated government succession financing program. Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) provides CGT reduction for sellers
- Opportunity: Northern England, Scotland, and Wales are underserved by buyers
Spain
- Scale: ~300,000 businesses at succession risk by 2030
- Challenge: Fragmented market, limited M&A advisory for SMEs
- Opportunity: Low multiples (3-5x), growing ETA community linked to IESE Barcelona
Latin America
- Scale: Millions of first-generation entrepreneurs approaching retirement across Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Chile
- Challenge: Informality, currency risk, limited acquisition financing
- Opportunity: Lowest multiples (3-5x), least buyer competition, but highest execution risk
Ranking: Best markets for succession-driven ETA
- 1. France: Best financing + tax incentives + moderate multiples. The single best market for well-financed first-time acquirers
- 2. United States: Deepest market, best infrastructure, highest deal volume. But highest multiples
- 3. Germany: World-class businesses, strong government support. Higher multiples for quality assets
- 4. Canada: US-like market at lower multiples with BDC support
- 5. Japan: Highest deal volume, lowest multiples, but significant cultural barriers
- 6. Spain/Italy: Low multiples but less developed acquisition ecosystems
For detailed country guides, see our regional guides. For country-level capital gains tax rates and EBITDA multiples, see our comparative analyses.
Frequently asked questions
How many businesses worldwide are at risk of closing due to the succession crisis?
According to OECD estimates, 10 to 15 million SMEs across OECD member countries will need to change ownership or face closure within the next decade due to aging business owners. The combined enterprise value at risk exceeds $10 trillion. Japan's METI estimates 1.27 million businesses at risk in Japan alone, while KfW's Nachfolge Monitor reports 600,000 German Mittelstand companies seeking successors by 2030. In the United States, the Exit Planning Institute estimates that 4.5 million baby boomer-owned businesses valued at approximately $10 trillion will transition by 2035. The baby boomer succession wave is the single largest generational transfer of business ownership in economic history, and the failure rate for succession (30-50% of listed businesses never finding a buyer) highlights the urgency for qualified acquirers.
Which country offers the best combination of deal flow, financing, and valuations for succession-driven ETA?
France consistently ranks as the most attractive market for first-time succession-focused acquirers. According to Bpifrance's annual report, France's public investment bank provides over €2 billion annually in acquisition financing for SME transitions, at subsidized rates and with government guarantees. The Dutreil pact offers a 75% exemption on inheritance and gift tax for qualifying business transfers, and retiring sellers benefit from capital gains tax exemptions when they transfer their business to a successor. EBITDA multiples for French SMEs typically range from 3.5x to 6x, below the 5x to 8x range common in the United States. Germany offers comparable business quality with KfW financing support, while the US has the deepest market and best infrastructure but the highest buyer competition.
How does the succession crisis in Japan differ from the crisis in Europe and the US?
Japan's succession crisis is structurally more severe than its counterparts in Europe and the US due to three compounding factors. First, Japan's population is actively shrinking, the country lost over 800,000 people in 2023 alone, according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, meaning there are fewer potential successors with each passing year. Second, cultural preferences for seniority-based corporate employment mean that younger Japanese professionals are less likely to pursue business ownership than their American or European peers. Third, the sheer scale is staggering: Teikoku Databank reports that 60.5% of Japanese businesses have no succession plan, and 49,000 profitable businesses close annually for lack of a successor. However, Japan also offers the most generous government support, including 100% tax deferrals on succession shares, subsidized M&A advisory, and government-operated matching platforms in all 47 prefectures.
Sources
- OECD, SME and Entrepreneurship Outlook: Business Succession (2024)
- KfW Research, Nachfolge Monitor Mittelstand (2024)
- Small and Medium Enterprise Agency (METI), White Paper on SMEs in Japan (2024)