Read more
Zusatztext This is an excellent book comprehensively examining the Chinese corporate bankruptcy law and investigating not only the law on the books but also the law in action. The most valuable contribution of this book is that many arguments rely on the firsthand data, both quantitative and qualitative, meticulously collected from official sources and fieldwork interviews. This evidence-based approach, deployed throughout the book, makes the analysis considerably insightful. Informationen zum Autor Natalie Mrockova is Researcher and Lecturer at Merton College and Law and Finance Associate at the China Centre, University of Oxford, UK. Vorwort A fascinating study which uses qualitative and quantitative data and insights from interviews to provide a new perspective on the problems that have hindered the implementation of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law in China. Zusammenfassung This fascinating study uses qualitative and quantitative data and insights from interviews with judges, lawyers, government officials, entrepreneurs, bankers, consultants, and academics in China and abroad, to provide a new perspective on the problems that have hindered the implementation of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law in China, and recent attempts at reform. The analysis provides unique insights into China’s business world and its interaction with the judicial and political system in China.In addition, the book also provides important information about how the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law affects foreign companies, agencies and governments that are active in China. The author draws on empirical data, decided cases and her experience of how the law and surrounding practices deal with foreign stakeholders whose interests are affected by corporate bankruptcy in China.The book will improve understanding of how China’s corporate bankruptcy law has been used in practice, what has limited its practical effectiveness, whether it is desirable for the law to be used more readily in China, and the possible options for its reform. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction 1.1. Theoretical Framework: Economic Analysis of Law 1.2. Why Bankruptcy Law Matters 1.3. Methodology 1.4. Structure of the Book PART IBACKGROUND 2. China’s Socio-Economic, Political and Legal Environment 2.1. Economic and Political Transformation of China 2.2. Power and the Party-State 2.3. Laws and Rules in China 2.4. Courts, the Party-State and Limited Law Enforcement in China 2.5. Corporate Ownership and Control in China 3. Debt Finance and Enforcement in China 3.1. Debt Finance in China 3.2. Companies’ Access to Credit in China 3.3. Debt Enforcement Mechanisms in China 3.4. General Challenges to Debt Enforcement in China PART IITHE EBL AND ITS PRACTICAL LIMITATIONS 4. Bankruptcy Law in China 4.1. History of Bankruptcy Law in China 4.2. Black-letter Overview of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law 2006 4.3. Supreme People’s Court’s Interpretations and Judicial Cases 4.4. Personal Bankruptcy Law 5. Limited Use of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law 2006 and its Causes 5.1. Limited Use of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law 2006 5.2. Reasons for the Limited Use of the EBL – The Four ‘Constraints’ 6. The First Constraint – Creditors and Debtors Feel Insufficiently Protected under the EBL 6.1. Implications of Courts’ Duties to Protect Employees 6.2. Heightened Threat of Scrutiny and Liability under the EBL 6.3. Insolvency as De Facto Entry Requirement for Reorganisation 7. The Second Constraint – Reduced Recoveries under the EBL 7.1. General Flaws in Debt Enforcement that Negatively Affect Recoveries under the EBL 7.2. Shortcomings that Specifically Affect EBL Enforcement 7.3. The EBL not Viable for Certain Types of Debt Contracts 8. The Third Constraint – Limitations and Biases of EBL Enforcers 8.1. Courts’ and Lawyers’ Internal Limitations 8.2. Administrators’ Passivity 8.3....