Stigma, corporate insolvency, and law: international practices and lessons for India
Abstract
nsolvency and bankruptcy have always attracted a measure of stigma. The negative attitude
towards insolvency emerged due to the historically harsh treatment of bankrupts and the
perception of bankruptcy as a breach of a sacred relationship between the debtor and creditor.
Majority of the existing legal scholarship studying the bankruptcy stigma focuses on personal
insolvencies, while its influence on corporate insolvencies has largely been neglected. This
paper attempts to fill this gap by examining the impact and manifestations of stigma in the
context of corporate insolvency. The paper does so by contrasting the corporate insolvency
schemes of the United States and the United Kingdom. It argues that while both jurisdictions
prioritise the rehabilitation of corporate debtors, there is a divergence in the methodologies
across the Atlantic due to the varied historical, cultural, and economic attitudes towards
business failures. With this background, the paper explores bankruptcy stigma in the Indian
context and shows how certain provisions of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 seem
to reinforce and perpetuate the stigma against incumbent management and promoters of
corporate debtors. The paper argues that there is a need to ameliorate the stigma associated
with corporate insolvency for the successful rescue and rehabilitation of distressed corporations
and for promoting entrepreneurship, innovation, and economic growth in the country.
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