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China Plans to Enact New Bankruptcy Law
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=BEF05B:2AB91D3

Measure intended to raise investor confidence





Chinese currency  (AP photo)After 10 years of debate, China is
close to enacting a bankruptcy law, a measure intended to raise
investor confidence. But it could also be the long-awaited key to
unlocking the debt problem burdening China's banks. The National
People's Congress is expected to take up the bill at its session
beginning this week.

China's current bankruptcy system reflects its old communist command
economy in which the government chose which state-owned enterprises
would flourish or die.

But China is now increasingly a market economy, driven by private
investment. Without an effective bankruptcy law, it is uncertain
whether investors can get their money back if a company goes bust.

And Chinese banks remain trapped in a cycle of lending to inefficient
state-owned enterprises - despite already shouldering billions of
dollars of unpaid loans.

That is about to change. The annual session of the National People's
Congress this month is expected to pass a new law updating the
bankruptcy system.

Legal experts welcome the measure as an important step. Michael Barker
is a bankruptcy lawyer for the international firm, Freshfields,
Bruckhaus and Deringer.

"I think the Chinese authorities realized that an efficient bankruptcy
regime is an essential cornerstone for building a market economy which
is conducive to free enterprise, foreign investment and competition,"
he said.

Lawyers and bankers complain that under the current system, the
Chinese government plays conflicting roles when a state-owned company
fails. The government is shareholder, arbiter and creditor, all at the
same time.

The government decides whether or not to approve petitions for
bankruptcy. In some cases, the government controls assets of troubled
companies on the grounds of national security. Workers are paid before
other claimants.

Chua Eu Jin is a lawyer at the Shanghai office of the international
law firm Clifford Chance.

"The current bankruptcy law passed in 1986 is geared toward public
sector bankruptcy and its articles and sections have often been
criticized of being debtor friendly or overprotective of the rights of
employees," he said.

Lawyers familiar with the latest draft say it has articles similar to
those found in Western bankruptcy laws. The new law would uniformly
apply to all types of companies and a court would rule on bankruptcy
petitions. The concept of a corporate rescue or reorganization under a
bankruptcy court's guidance will be introduced.

But the changes did not come easily. It took 10 years of debate to
draft the legislation. Mr. Chua says officials prepared for its
far-reaching social effects.

 

"Bankruptcy is often accompanied by wrenching social issues, such as
unemployment," he said. "Perhaps there's some recognition on the part
of the Chinese authorities that the wholesale introduction of Western
style bankruptcy is more likely to lead to the closure of inefficient
state-owned enterprises."

 

The law could unlock the debt burden of China's banks. With a solid
set of rules governing insolvency, banks could take steps to have bad
loans repaid. The assets of troubled state-owned enterprises could be
sold to cover their debts, while viable companies could be
restructured and kept operating.

Banks also could more easily sell non-performing loans to foreign
companies, which in turn, could take over the debtor businesses and
make them profitable.

However, some lawyers, like Mr. Barker at Freshfields, say it is not
clear whether the law would jumpstart the sale of these loans.

"The introduction of the new law may mean that Chinese banks might
prefer to use the bankruptcy to try to recover loans themselves rather
than to sell them to foreigners," he said. " And also all of the
current red tape surrounding the sale of NPLs to foreign investors
would not have changed."



Despite the law's promise, some are skeptical about how far China will
go in implementing it.

Lawyers point out possible problems: The draft suggests an exemption
period for certain SOEs. It also is unclear about what happens when
bankrupt companies have assets in several countries or when foreign
creditors try to seize assets in China. Some experts question whether
the bankruptcy courts will be politically independent.

Charles Booth is a law professor at Hong Kong University. He says more
even after the law is passed, more work is needed.

 

"You need to train thousands of professionals, you've to train the
judges, you need to make sure that your bankruptcy law is harmonious
with other laws and you also have to develop a real corporate rescue
culture," he said.

That could take years, say experts. In the meantime, they say, as
China takes on more and more features of a capitalist economy, its
laws need to keep up with the new changes.