The adoption of an all-inclusive bankruptcy law is of great and
far-reaching significance to the establishment and development of
China's market economy.
After 12 years of careful preparation, the Standing Committee of
the National People's Congress finally passed a new corporate
bankruptcy law on Sunday. It will take effect on June 1, 2007.
With this new bankruptcy law, China is poised to allow the
market to assume an even bigger role in raising the overall
efficiency of the national economy. As one of the basic laws
underpinning the country's market economy, it will standardize and
facilitate the exit of failed businesses from the market, enabling
the fittest to survive and spring up.
Unlike its predecessor, promulgated in 1986 on a test basis to
deal only with state-owned enterprises (SOEs), the new law covers
the liquidation of businesses of all types. Every company and
enterprise in the country, state-owned or private, will have to
follow a unified corporate bankruptcy law if they founder.
Particularly remarkable about the new law are the different
approaches it stipulates in addressing historical problems and new
bankruptcy cases.
By putting workers before creditors in bankruptcy cases of SOEs
that occurred before the new law was published, the legislators
demonstrate a firm grasp of the history of the Chinese economy.
While the country has steadily shifted away from central
planning in the past two decades, numerous state firms that had
accounted for the overwhelming majority of the national economy
could hardly stand market competition, nor provide sufficient
protection for their workers.
On the other hand, it was not until recent years that the
country began to set up a social welfare system, which is still
unable to cover all employees from those state-owned enterprises.
Under such circumstances, it is certainly necessary to ensure that
laid-off workers are paid before creditors when those state firms
go to liquidation.
From 1994 to 2005, China allowed 3,658 moribund state
enterprises to close with the support of government subsidies.
Another 2,000 SOEs specified by the state Council will be closed
down with the aid of government bailouts and can pay laid-off
workers first.
However, by making these cases an exception, the new law
emphasizes the importance of protecting creditors' rights. The new
law stipulates that from June 1, 2007, all insolvent enterprises
will pay credit guarantees to creditors first, and use other assets
not earmarked as credit guarantees to pay laid-off workers.
Undoubtedly, the new law is in line with standard international
practice. It will improve the country's legal environment to both
cement foreign investors' confidence in the Chinese economy and
support domestic enterprises' requirement of market status when
they are unfairly charged of dumping in other countries.
Also, the new law will help accelerate the country's financial
reforms. In the stock market, failed companies will be de-listed
swiftly to allow more capital to flow to those competitive ones.
For Chinese banks, which have long been plagued by bad loans, a new
bankruptcy law stressing creditors' rights will put them in a more
advantageous position to limit the risk and loss of their
lending.
More important, the new law has laid a solid foundation for the
development of a credit culture in China. A sound credit culture
has proven crucial for the growth of a finance-based modern
economy.
(China Daily August 29, 2006)