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Chinese Restaurants Are Closing. That’s a Good Thing, the Owners Say.

The share of Chinese restaurants has fallen in metro areas across the country in the last five years. Many owners are glad their children won’t be taking over.

A selection of dishes at Nom Wah Tea Parlor in New York, which has been serving dim sum since the early 20th century.Credit...Colin Clark for The New York Times

KINGSTON, N.Y. — More than 40 years after buying Eng’s, a Chinese-American restaurant in the Hudson Valley, Tom Sit is reluctantly considering retirement.

For much of his life, Mr. Sit has worked here seven days a week, 12 hours a day. He cooks in the same kitchen where he worked as a young immigrant from China. He parks in the same lot where he’d take breaks and read his wife’s letters, sent from Montreal while they courted by post in the late 1970s. He seats his regulars at the same tables where his three daughters did homework.

Two years ago, at the insistence of his wife, Faye Lee Sit, he started taking off one day a week. Still, it’s not sustainable. He’s 76, and they’re going to be grandparents soon. Working 80 hours a week is just too hard. But his grown daughters, who have college degrees and well-paying jobs, don’t intend to take over.

Image
Tom Sit has cooked in the same kitchen for 45 years, making Chinese-American dishes and putting his own spin on the recipes.Credit...Lauren Lancaster for The New York Times

Across the country, owners of Chinese-American restaurants like Eng’s are ready to retire but have no one to pass the business to. Their children, educated and raised in America, are pursuing professional careers that do not demand the same grueling labor as food service.

According to new data from the restaurant reviewing website Yelp, the share of Chinese restaurants in the top 20 metropolitan areas has been consistently falling. Five years ago, an average of 7.3 percent of all restaurants in these areas were Chinese, compared with 6.5 percent today. That reflects 1,200 fewer Chinese restaurants at a time when these 20 places added more than 15,000 restaurants over all.

Chinese restaurants are losing ground in metro areas around the country

Share of restaurants in metro areas that are ...

Chinese

2%4%6%8%10%20162018ChicagoMiamiNew York CitySan FranciscoWashington

Indian

2%4%6%8%10%20162018

Korean

2%4%6%8%10%20162018

Vietnamese

2%4%6%8%10%20162018
Source: Yelp

More economically mobile immigrant children are less likely to be self-employed

Change in the self-employment rate between first- and second-generation immigrants

+5%

El Salvador

Britain

Yugoslavia

Honduras

Poland

Philippines

Haiti

Ecuador

China

Jamaica

Portugal

Japan

Germany

Thailand

France

India

Peru

Colombia

Hungary

Brazil

Cuba

-5%

Egypt

Cambodia

Vietnam

Italy

Nigeria

Ireland

Argentina

Israel

Lebanon

Pakistan

-10%

Greece

Taiwan

Iran

-15%

South Korea

45th

pctile.

50th

pctile

55th

pctile

60th

pctile

65th

pctile

Average income rank for boys from poor families

Source: Analysis of Current Population Survey by Robert Fairlie, UC Santa Cruz, “Intergenerational Mobility of Immigrants Over Two Centuries,” Ran Abramitzky, Leah Boustan, Elisa Jacome and Santiago Perez.

Most common fields for self-employed immigrants

In first generation

ChinaIndiaSouth KoreaVietnam
1

restaurants

computer services

restaurants

nail salons

2

construction

trucking

health

beauty salons

3

computer services

grocery stores

education

construction

4

nail salons

consulting

dry cleaning

restaurants

5

consulting

gasoline stations

insurance

shoe repair

In second generation

ChinaIndiaSouth KoreaVietnam
1

computer services

consulting

consulting

construction

2

dentistry

computer services

physicians

beverage mfg.

3

arts

insurance

legal services

legal services

4

consulting

real estate

admin. support

restaurants

5

education

landscaping

travel

real estate

Source: Current Population Survey, 2015 through 2019

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A correction was made on 
Dec. 24, 2019

An earlier version of this article misstated the year Tom Sit immigrated to the United States. It was 1974, not 1976.


When we learn of a mistake, we acknowledge it with a correction. If you spot an error, please let us know at nytnews@nytimes.com.Learn more

Amelia Nierenberg is a reporter on the Food desk. More about Amelia Nierenberg

Quoctrung Bui is a graphics editor and covers social science and policy for The Upshot. He joined The Times in 2015, and previously worked for National Public Radio covering economics and everyday life. More about Quoctrung Bui

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 26, 2019, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: No Successors? For Chinese Restaurant Owners, That’s a Success. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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