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INSOL Europe Academic Forum and Sussex Law School, Brighton, UK Looking Forward to the Cork Report + 30 Thursday 26 March 2009. Welcome to the University of Sussex Professor Michael Farthing, Vice-Chancellor. Welcome to the Sussex Law School Dr Joanna Bridgeman, Head of School.
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INSOL Europe Academic Forum and Sussex Law School, Brighton, UK Looking Forward to the Cork Report + 30 Thursday 26 March 2009
Welcome to the University of Sussex Professor Michael Farthing, Vice-Chancellor
Welcome to the Sussex Law School Dr Joanna Bridgeman, Head of School
Sussex Law School Programmes UNDERGRADUATE LLB Law LLB Law with Anthropology LLB Law with American Studies LLB Law with Contemporary European Studies LLB Law with French, German, Italian, Spanish LLB Law with International Relations LLB Law with Politics Planned for 2010: LLB Law and Business All Qualifying Law Degrees
CPE/GDL Foundational Subjects plus dissertation Currently 30 students
Sussex Law School • Knowledge and understanding of legal rules • Critical approach to the law • Studying law in its context • Develop legal skills
Postgraduate Programmes • LLM in European Law (from Oct 2009) • LLM in Family and Child Law • LLM in International Criminal Law • LLM in International Law: Rights and Responsibilities • LLM in International Trade Law • LLM in Law and International Security (from October 2009) • LLM Master of Laws
RESEARCH RAE 2008 - Ranked 16th out of 67 for legal research All work submitted at least ‘Internationally Recognised’ Identified strengths in Child and Family Law; Criminal Law and Justice; European Law; International and Comparative Law Research themes: Legal conceptualisations (security; solidarity; responsibility; Governance; Citizenship and Constitutions
Session 1: The Historical Perspective Chair: Professor David Milman, Lancaster University
The Legacy of the 1986 Legislation Professor Philip Wood, University of Oxford
Lessons from the 2000 Review Group Professor Harry Rajak, University of Sussex
Changing Trends in UK Insolvency Law Dr Donna McKenzie Skene, University of Aberdeen
INSOL Europe Academic Forum and Sussex Law School, Brighton, UK Looking Forward to the Cork Report + 30 Thursday 26 March 2009
Session 2: The Regulators’ Perspective Chair: Professor Harry Rajak, University of Sussex
Administering the Insolvency World: Changes in Institutional Policy Stephen Speed, The Insolvency Service
“It is a basic objective of the law to support the maintenance of commercial morality and encourage the fulfilment of financial obligations.” Report of the Insolvency Law Review Committee, part 1 (“Cork Report”)
Enforcement Concordat (1998) • Hampton Review (2005) • Regulators' Compliance Code(2008)
Regulators should make use of comprehensive risk assessment • Regulators should be accountable for their efficiency and effectiveness, but independent in the decisions they take • No inspection should take place without a reason • Businesses should not have to give unnecessary information, nor give the same piece of information twice • The few businesses that persistently break regulations should be identified quickly and face proportionate and meaningful sanctions • Regulators should provide authoritative, accessible advice easily and cheaply • Regulators should be of the right size and scope, and no new regulator should be created where an existing one can do the work • Regulators should allow economic progress, and only intervene when there is a clear case for protection
The Credit Crisis "Restoring both lending and confidence will not be easy and will take time" – Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England "The UK began the global recession with a relatively strong jobs position, but our advantage is beginning to disappear as redundancies mount." – Brendan Barber, General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress “I've been hearing a great deal more expressions of concerns about administration in general and pre-pack administrations in particular” – Peter Luff MP, Chair of the House of Commons Business and Enterprise Committee
“In particular, an Insolvency Practitioner should consider what a reasonable and informed third party, having knowledge of all relevant information [...] would conclude to be acceptable.” – Evaluation of threats, from the Insolvency Code of Ethics
Insolvency Practitioner Fees • More flexibility • Fixed fee option • Reports to creditors every 6 months in administrations; every 12 months in bankruptcies and liquidations
Pre-packaged Administrations • Increased transparency(Statement of Insolvency Practice 16) • Active monitoring by The Insolvency Service
"Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?" asked Alice. "That depends a good deal on where you want to get to," said the Cat. – Lewis Carroll
Cork’s Insolvency Ombudsman: Time for a Rethink? Professors Adrian Walters & Mary Seneviratne, Nottingham Trent University
Cork & IP regulation • Cork’s recommendations: • Establishment of licensing system • Bonding requirements • Establishment of an insolvency ombudsman • Ombudsman recommendation not taken forward
IP regulation under Pt XIII IA 1986 • Recognised professional bodies: • Institute of Chartered Accountants in England & Wales (ICAEW) • Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) • Insolvency Practitioners Association (IPA) • Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland (ICAI) • Institute of Chartered Accountants in Scotland (ICAS) • The Law Society (LS) • The Law Society of Scotland (LSS) • Insolvency Service: • Direct licensing body • ‘Regulator of regulators’ • Self-regulation within a statutory framework
Our work for the Insolvency Practices Council (IPC). • The IPC (est. 2000) is a public interest body that advises the insolvency profession on the professional and ethical standards of IPs • First report: Complaints Handling in the Insolvency Practitioner Profession (Jan 2008): http://ssrn.com/abstract=1094757 • Complaints handling within IP and IVA firms • Complaints handling and disciplinary processes of the insolvency regulators • Second report: Complaints Handling by the Regulators of Insolvency Practitioners: A Comparative Study (Jan 2009): http://ssrn.com/abstract=1310791 • Comparison with other professions
Context • Ombudsman last considered (and rejected) by the Ten Years On review (1998) • Different world now? • Increase in consumer engagement with the insolvency system • Economic climate • Full regulatory reviews in other professions (Behrens, Carsberg, Clementi etc)
Independent/external oversight of IPs outside the self-regulatory framework • Solicitor IPs – Legal Services Ombudsman (Office for Legal Complaints from 2010) • Debt advice/resolution services under a standard consumer credit licence (IPs in IVA firms) – Financial Ombudsman • Contrast position of IPs providing debt advice/resolution services under ICAEW and ACCA group consumer credit licences • Accountant RPBs & IPA: • Internal processes only & strong focus on discipline • Though NB considerable lay involvement: regulatory boards, reviewers of complaints, lay membership of disciplinary & appeal committees
Benchmarking complaints& disciplinary systems • Jurisdiction • Purpose • Context • Accessibility • Process • Remedies • Sanctions • Accountability • Independence
Benchmarking complaints& disciplinary systems • Jurisdiction • Purpose • Context • Accessibility • Process • Remedies • Sanctions • Accountability • Independence
Key trends in comparator professions • Comparators: • Lawyers (Bar Standards Board) • Surveyors (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors) • Doctors (General Medical Council, Primary Care Trusts) • Financial services (the Financial Ombudsman scheme) • Separation of regulation & representation • Increased emphasis on consumer redress alongside regulation & discipline • Increased tendency towards external oversight and external avenues of appeal, review and redress for complainants
How does the IP profession measure up? • Demonstrable separation between regulation & representation • Complainant facing redress?? • Independent external oversight triggered by complainants?? • Role of Insolvency Service • Court supervision of office holders (?accessibility) • Some shift towards solicitors & surveyors with establishment of separate regulatory boards by ICAEW, ACCA & ICAI • But no comparable external oversight mechanism
Conclusions • Strong case for extension of financial ombudsman scheme to all IPs involved in provision of debt advice/debt resolution to individuals • The wider ombudsman question: • Continued currency of arguments against? • Different world • Case for a full Clementi-style review in the interests of maintaining & promoting public confidence?
INSOL Europe Academic Forum and Sussex Law School, Brighton, UK Looking Forward to the Cork Report + 30 Thursday 26 March 2009
Session 3: The Practitioners’ Perspective Chair: Patricia Godfrey, Nabarro Nathanson
Competition over Assets Neil Cooper, ZolfoCooper
The Achievements of the 1986 Legislation Nick O’Reilly, President, R3
INSOL Europe Academic Forum and Sussex Law School, Brighton, UK Looking Forward to the Cork Report + 30 Thursday 26 March 2009
Session 4: The Reform Perspective Chair: Paul Omar, University of Sussex
Evolving Trends in Security and the Impact on Insolvency Dr Sandra Frisby Baker & McKenzie Associate Professor and Reader in Company and Commercial Law University of Nottingham Joint Insolvency Conference, 26 March 2009
Priority and Control • Security allocates insolvent’s assets to the security holder • Therefore fixed and floating charges, retention of title devices and trust-based schemes deplete the asset pool • On insolvency, initial decision on fate of the company may rest with security holder • Choice of strategy • Administrative receivership (pre-Enterprise Act floating charge), Schedule B1 paragraph 14 Insolvency Act 1986 • Deployment of collateral within insolvency procedure
‘Taxation’ of security holders in insolvency • The vulnerability of the floating charge • Preferential debts, the prescribed part, expenses of the insolvency procedure, post-appointment liabilities • Regulating control rights • The statutory moratorium in administration, disposition of collateral (with court consent in certain cases), taking account of all interests (the ‘purpose’ of administration)
Fragmentation of Security Interests in the SME Sector • Asset based lending in the ascendancy • Receivables finance (invoice discounting and factoring), hire purchase, chattel leasing, sale and lease back • Rise of almost 800% in value between 1995 and 2008 (Source – Asset Based Finance Association Statistics) • Industry worth £208,014,000in 2008, representing a rise of 9.1% from 2007 • Sector split evenly between manufacturing and service providers
The Effectiveness of Receivables Financing: Tax Avoidance • The Spectrum Plus problem side-stepped • By outright assignment or trust-based collection (the fixed charge characterisation) • And revolving nature of arrangement does not impede cash flow • Although other institutional lenders may devise alternative solutions • Drip feed a current account from a blocked account?
The Effectiveness of Receivables Financing: Higher Returns • 100% return in 50% of cases in ‘relationship lending’ sample • Statutory taxation, insolvency-related depreciation • 100% return in 82% of cases in receivables finance lending sample • The main ‘danger’ here being fraud • Advantages to borrowers • Flexible form of finance which can adapt to growth • Asset based lending generally exploits value for companies