In India, currently, there are multiple laws dealing with the insolvency of a company or an entity, which complicate the process leading to significant delays in closing a company in the case a company goes bust or simply to wind up a company. This situation also dissuades foreign investment since it becomes very difficult for a company of foreign origin to wind up its business and get out.
India also ranks extremely poorly in World Bank’s ease of doing business/Resolving Insolvency Ranking:
The new Bankruptcy Code seeks to consolidate the existing framework and is envisaged to create a new, faster and far more effective institutional framework. It attempts to create a formal Insolvency Resolution Process (IRP) for businesses, either by proposing a viable survival mechanism or by ensuring speedy liquidation of the insolvent entity.
This Bankruptcy law accepts that firms and business ventures can fail and it allows entrepreneurs to make a new start. The focus of this unified regime on structured and time-bound process for insolvency resolution and liquidation could significantly improve debt recovery rates and revitalise the ailing Indian Banking System and corporate bond markets.
While it facilitates failed/debt-ridden firms to wind up in a painless manner, the code also paves the way for resurrection too.
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