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Insolvency and Corparate Bankruptcy in China
by David Carnes

Published on this site: November 28th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month
Insolvency
China's insolvency regime is still developing. Insolvency
remains a particularly sensitive issue in China because there
many technically insolvent state-owned enterprises and
financial institutions, forcing China to choose between
economic inefficiency and mass lay-offs that could disrupt
social stability.
Commencement of Insolvency Action
Both voluntary and involuntary actions are available
(instituted by the debtor or a creditor, respectively). An
insolvency action begins with an application in the People's
Court for a declaration of insolvency; the applicant must show
that the debtor is unable to repay its debts as they come due.
A declaration of insolvency will stay all other proceedings
against the debtor company, but usually requires the company to
suspend its business operations.
Notification
The People's Court will notify creditors of the commencement of
insolvency procedures by either written notice or public
announcement. Creditors notified by written notice must claim
their rights within 30 days of the date of receipt, and
creditors who have not received written notice have three
months from the public announcement to claim their rights.
Missing these deadlines will extinguish the creditor's claims.
Property
All property either owned by the company at the date of the
insolvency declaration or thereafter acquired is available for
distribution to creditors, including intellectual property,
real estate, equity investments and property recovered from a
voidable transaction. This property is usually liquidated
through auction.
Voidable Transactions
Certain acts of an SOE are deemed invalid if they are committed
any time from six months prior to the court's acceptance of the
insolvency petition to the date of the insolvency declaration
(or committed by an FIE within 180 days prior to the
commencement of liquidation)
- Sale of property at substantially below market value
- Concealment, secret distributions, or gifts of property
- Surrender of claims as a creditor
- Provision of security for previously unsecured debt
- Repayment of debts prior to maturity
Distribution Priority
Claims must usually be paid in the following order (although in
some jurisdictions employee claims outrank even secured
creditors)
- Secured creditors
- Insolvency expenses
- Employee wages and unpaid social security payments
- Outstanding taxes
- Unsecured creditors
Corporate Bankruptcy Law
China recently adopted a new Corporate Bankruptcy Law to
replace the provisional Enterprise Bankruptcy Law that has been
in place since 1986, marking a major advance in its corporate
bankruptcy system. The law will go into effect on June 1, 2007.
This law clarifies the bankruptcy issues of financial
organizations, balances the rights and interests labor and
guarantee creditors, and redefines the liquidation order in
enterprise bankruptcy. China's New Corporate Bankruptcy Law has
been badly needed for quite some time, as the development of
China's market economy has naturally resulted in increasing
bankruptcies, especially in the state-owned sector.
The law covers all corporate entities including state-owned
enterprises, private domestically funded enterprises, and
foreign invested enterprises. Perhaps its most praiseworthy
feature is a reorganization system to allow ailing enterprises
to avoid bankruptcy. It also deals admirably with cross-border
bankruptcy issues, and stipulates specific procedures for the
handling of debt issues. It offers meaningful guaranteed
property rights for mortgage holders, etc., and offers priority
to mortgage holders, etc. over staff creditors such as unpaid
employees, etc.(unfortunately, state-owned enterprises will not
be subject to this rule before the end of 2008 at the earliest).
Finally, it arranges for professionalized management of the
liquidation process (instead of management by unpaid local
government officials who frequently bungle the liquidation).

David Carnes- is licensed to practice
law in
California. He speaks and reads Mandarin Chinese and has
several years experience working with Chinese law firms and
Sino-American joint ventures. His website, China Breezes, is at
http://www.lunaticwisdom.com/blog1.


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