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Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy is a legal process through which people or other entities who cannot repay debts to creditors may seek relief from some or all of their debts. In most jurisdictions, bankruptcy is imposed by a court order, often initiated by the debtor.

"Bankrupt" redirects here. For the album, see Bankrupt! For the band, see Bankrupt (band).

Bankrupt is not the only legal status that an insolvent person may have, and the term bankruptcy is therefore not a synonym for insolvency.

Etymology[edit]

The word bankruptcy is derived from Italian banca rotta, literally meaning "broken bench" but more practically "broken bank". The term is often described as having originated in Renaissance Italy, where there allegedly existed the tradition of smashing a banker's bench if he defaulted on payment. However, the existence of such a ritual is doubted.[1][2]

If required to repay the loan, the borrower cannot maintain a minimal standard of living;

The borrower's financial situation is likely to continue for most or all of the repayment period; and

The borrower has made a good faith effort to repay the student loans.

[7]

The principal focus of modern insolvency legislation and business debt restructuring practices no longer rests on the elimination of insolvent entities, but on the remodeling of the financial and organizational structure of debtors experiencing financial distress so as to permit the rehabilitation and continuation of the business.


For private households, it is important to assess the underlying problems and to minimize the risk of financial distress to recur. It has been stressed that debt advice, a supervised rehabilitation period, financial education and social help to find sources of income and to improve the management of household expenditures must be equally provided during this period of rehabilitation (Refiner et al., 2003; Gerhardt, 2009; Frade, 2010). In most EU member States, debt discharge is conditioned by a partial payment obligation and by a number of requirements concerning the debtor's behavior. In the United States (US), discharge is conditioned to a lesser extent. The spectrum is broad in the EU, with the UK coming closest to the US system (Reifner et al., 2003; Gerhardt, 2009; Frade, 2010). The Other Member States do not provide the option of a debt discharge. Spain, for example, passed a bankruptcy law (ley concurs) in 2003 which provides for debt settlement plans that can result in a reduction of the debt (maximally half of the amount) or an extension of the payment period of maximally five years (Gerhardt, 2009), but it does not foresee debt discharge.[5]


In the US, it is very difficult to discharge federal or federally guaranteed student loan debt by filing bankruptcy.[6] Unlike most other debts, those student loans may be discharged only if the person seeking discharge establishes specific grounds for discharge under the Brunner test,[7] under which the court evaluates three factors:


Even if a debtor proves all three elements, a court may permit only a partial discharge of the student loan. Student loan borrowers may benefit from restructuring their payments through a Chapter 13 bankruptcy repayment plan, but few qualify for discharge of part or all of their student loan debt.[8]

Fraud[edit]

Bankruptcy fraud is a white-collar crime most typically involving concealment of assets by a debtor to avoid liquidation in bankruptcy proceedings. It may include filing of false information, multiple filings in different jurisdictions, bribery, and other acts.[9]


While difficult to generalize across jurisdictions, common criminal acts under bankruptcy statutes typically involve concealment of assets, concealment or destruction of documents, conflicts of interest, fraudulent claims, false statements or declarations, and fee fixing or redistribution arrangements. Falsifications on bankruptcy forms often constitute perjury. Multiple filings are not in and of themselves criminal, but they may violate provisions of bankruptcy law. In the U.S., bankruptcy fraud statutes are particularly focused on the mental state of particular actions.[10][11] Bankruptcy fraud is a federal crime in the United States.[12]


Bankruptcy fraud should be distinguished from strategic bankruptcy, which is not a criminal act since it creates a real (not a fake) bankruptcy state. However, it may still work against the filer.


All assets must be disclosed in bankruptcy schedules whether or not the debtor believes the asset has a net value. This is because once a bankruptcy petition is filed, it is for the creditors, not the debtor, to decide whether a particular asset has value. The future ramifications of omitting assets from schedules can be quite serious for the offending debtor. In the United States, a closed bankruptcy may be reopened by motion of a creditor or the U.S. trustee if a debtor attempts to later assert ownership of such an "unscheduled asset" after being discharged of all debt in the bankruptcy. The trustee may then seize the asset and liquidate it for the benefit of the (formerly discharged) creditors. Whether or not a concealment of such an asset should also be considered for prosecution as fraud or perjury would then be at the discretion of the judge or U.S. Trustee.

Review the file for any fraudulent preferences or reviewable transactions

Chair meetings of creditors

Sell any non-exempt assets

Object to the bankrupt's discharge

Distribute funds to creditors

Effective sovereign bankruptcy[edit]

Technically, states do not collapse directly due to a sovereign default event itself. However, the tumultuous events that follow may bring down the state, so in common language, states would be described as being bankrupted.


An example of this is when a Korean state bankrupted Imperial China causing its destruction, or more specifically, when Chang'an's (Sui dynasty) war with Pyongyang (Goguryeo) in 614 A.D. ended in the former's disintegration within 4 years, although the latter also seemingly entered into decline and fell some 56 years later.[67]

(2001). Navigating Failure: Bankruptcy and Commercial Society in Antebellum America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 322. ISBN 0-8078-2600-6.

Balleisen, Edward

DePamphilis, Donald M. (2009). Mergers, Acquisitions, and Other Restructurings, 5th Edition. Elsevier, Academic Press.  978-0-12-374878-2.

ISBN

Mańko, Rafał. (PDF). Library Briefing. Library of the European Parliament. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 December 2013. Retrieved 21 February 2013.

"Cross-border insolvency law in the EU"

Sandage, Scott A. (2006). . Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-02107-X.

Born Losers: A History of Failure in America

. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). 1911.

"Bankruptcy" 

U.S. Federal Bankruptcy Courts

Official U.S. Bankruptcy Statistics

US Courts Bankruptcy Law

Executive Office for United States Bankruptcy Trustees

Cornell Bankruptcy Laws

National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys

Bankruptcy Research Database (WebBRD)

Website of the Insolvency Service in the UK

Archived 2010-09-09 at the Wayback Machine

Bankruptcy Statistics in Hong Kong

Official Means Testing Information