Promoted by CPA Australia
We should take note of lessons from the past and seize the opportunity to build a better corporate insolvency system.
Promoted by CPA Australia
We should take note of lessons from the past and seize the opportunity to build a better corporate insolvency system.
In its January 2020 annual survey of perceptions of thirty global risks, the World Economic Forum (WEF) ranked infectious diseases tenth in terms of impact, though well down in the bottom-half of expected likelihood. There is no need to repeat here how 2020 has tragically unfolded.
Pandemics fall into that hugely problematic economic phenomenon of ‘black swan’ events for which there are few ‘playbooks’ at hand for governments, policymakers and regulators to manoeuvre through the crisis. Other ‘black swan’ events include cyberattacks, terrorist attacks and extreme weather events.
It would be naïve to suggest that our systems of economic regulation and market oversight could be engineered to futureproof against eventualities both indeterminant and incalculable. Nevertheless, what the coronavirus pandemic has laid bare is the piecemeal fashion in which law reform is undertaken, along with the risks of winding down institutional and system-wide capacity.
Insolvency law is in the frontline of these stresses. It performs a pivotal economic role working through the multiple consequences of corporate collapse and transmitting to individuals – creditors, directors and owners – the financial, and in turn human, consequences of irreversible and irretrievable losses. Whilst also providing means of ‘rehabilitation’ for both assets and persons.
Business financial stress and collapse is inevitable; an expected, acceptable and necessary outcome in any market economy. Australia’s corporate insolvency laws and system has handled the ebb and flow of corporate failure associated with the impact of economic cycles and those instances of significant individual corporate collapse. Two interrelated matters of significant tension have now, nevertheless, become apparent as the coronavirus-related economic crisis unfolds:
Deeper challenges and opportunities are around: (i) where emphasis is placed, (ii) what the most suitable statutory and administrative mechanisms might be, recognising the diverse nature of the Australian economy whose participants are of widely differing size and complexity, and (iii) what are acceptable trade-offs acknowledging that there can be no perfect solution.
Given the overarching reality of insolvency law, the following are some of the issues which might be considered in a review:
If the Global Finance Crisis (GFC) is seen as an appropriate reference, COVID-19 could trigger well in excess of 10,000 corporate insolvencies working their way through the system on an annual basis. These daunting numbers will place significant stress on both the insolvency system and the economy more broadly; potentially impeding recovery.
A fatalistic view would regard this as consequence of the ‘black swan’ character of the pandemic. Nevertheless, what might actually be revealed is a failure of collective will to positively influence this critical part of our legal and economic system.
As many of the lessons from the GFC seem to have been forgotten, it would be a tragedy to likewise not grasp the opportunity at hand to build a better corporate insolvency system.
CPA Australia has a range of resources and guides to support accountants and business. View these resources on our COVID-19 hub including specific guidance for businesses in distress.
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