The Impact of Debtor-Friendly Reforms on the Performance of a Reorganization Procedure

Recent changes to Canadian bankruptcy law provide a natural experiment that we use to evaluate the impact of the international trend towards Chapter 11-style reorganization laws. Comparing random samples of reorganizing firms from before and after the law change show that changes to the law are associated with higher incentives for debtors to buy time prior to filing a proposal, a longer time in reorganization and a higher bankruptcy costs to assets ratio. The primary objective of the reform to attract more firms in reorganization has been met. The data also show that the system now attracts smaller and weaker firms although this has had very little impact on the acceptance rate and completion rate of reorganization plans.

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Source https://hal.science/hal-00707359
Author Fisher, Timothy, C.G., Martel, Jocelyn
Maintainer CCSD
Last Updated May 15, 2026, 19:22 (UTC)
Created May 15, 2026, 19:22 (UTC)
Identifier hal-00707359
Language en
Rights https://about.hal.science/hal-authorisation-v1/
contributor The University of Sydney
creator Fisher, Timothy, C.G.
date 2012-06-12T00:00:00
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harvest_source_id 3374d638-d20b-4672-ba96-a23232d55657
harvest_source_title test moissonnage SELUNE
metadata_modified 2024-12-06T00:00:00
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