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Part I - The role of credit

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 December 2009

Jagdeep S. Bhandari
Affiliation:
Duquesne University, Pittsburgh
Richard A. Posner
Affiliation:
INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France
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Summary

A corporation finances its operations (working capital and long-term assets) by issuing a combination of equity and credit. A firm may compensate suppliers of equity capital with dividends and, eventually, with proceeds from the firm's liquidation. The right to either, however, is residual and subject to any creditor claims. The only noncontingent right of an equity investor is the right to vote on matters of concern to the firm; most importantly, the right to elect the firm's managers. In contrast to its relationship with equity investors, a firm agrees to compensate creditors with fixed payments. A creditor's right to payment generally is noncontingent and, in the event a firm defaults on a fixed obligation, the unpaid creditor may begin collection proceedings pursuant to applicable nonbankruptcy law.

In a world without bankruptcy law, a collecting creditor might seize assets critical to the corporation's operation. A bankruptcy petition temporarily halts all legal proceedings against the debtor corporation and provides a period of time, or breathing space, for the corporation to renegotiate its fixed obligations. The nature and propriety of this breathing space is the subject of much of the literature on bankruptcy. However, the logical starting point for a book on corporate bankruptcy is an explanation of debt itself, because without debt's fixed obligations there would be no threat of destructive collection and no firm would need bankruptcy protection.

The first chapter in the book is the Nobel Memorial Prize Lecture “Leverage” by Merton Miller. In this lecture Miller uses recent concern about leveraged buyouts in the United States to explain the inherent advantages of fixed obligations to a firm – advantages that go beyond any benefits that result from United States income tax laws.

Type
Chapter
Information
Corporate Bankruptcy
Economic and Legal Perspectives
, pp. 1 - 2
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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