This brief essay responds to Yair Listokin’s article, “Paying for Performance in Bankruptcy: Why CEOs Should Be Compensated with Debt,” 155 U. PA. L. REV. 777 (2007). Professor Listokin argues that we should give official creditors’ committees the power to pay management of reorganizing debtors with corporate debt. This, he argues, would properly align their incentives with those who are most likely affected, the “residual claimant” unsecured creditors. Although Professor Listokin’s proposal is a welcome addition to our literature on corporate reorganization, this essay points out several basic problems with it: • First, nothing currently prevents parties from doing this through a reorganization plan; it is thus not clear why there is a...
It is a commonplace, but nonetheless true: the study of bankruptcy has attained a new respectability...
The length of time companies remain in bankruptcy reorganization is critically important. During tha...
(Excerpt) In 2005, following years of intensive lobbying by the consumer credit industry, the focus ...
This brief essay responds to Yair Listokin’s article, “Paying for Performance in Bankruptcy: Why CE...
While managerial performance always plays a critical role in determining firm performance, a manager...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
To reduce creditors\u27 and shareholders\u27 incentives to resist managers\u27 efforts to maximize, ...
In this Essay on Lynn LoPucki and Bill Whitford’s corporate reorganization project, written for a sy...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
Governing a corporation during a Chapter 11 reorganization presents a special case of the age-old pr...
To assess the ex ante costs of bankruptcy reform, Part I of this Article begins with an examination ...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
Part I of this Article describes the context in which the issues of corporate governance typically a...
Professor Lander responds to Professor Martin’s article by pointing out that the issue may not be so...
It is a commonplace, but nonetheless true: the study of bankruptcy has attained a new respectability...
The length of time companies remain in bankruptcy reorganization is critically important. During tha...
(Excerpt) In 2005, following years of intensive lobbying by the consumer credit industry, the focus ...
This brief essay responds to Yair Listokin’s article, “Paying for Performance in Bankruptcy: Why CE...
While managerial performance always plays a critical role in determining firm performance, a manager...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
To reduce creditors\u27 and shareholders\u27 incentives to resist managers\u27 efforts to maximize, ...
In this Essay on Lynn LoPucki and Bill Whitford’s corporate reorganization project, written for a sy...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, many observers believed that the American corporate bankruptcy laws we...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
Governing a corporation during a Chapter 11 reorganization presents a special case of the age-old pr...
To assess the ex ante costs of bankruptcy reform, Part I of this Article begins with an examination ...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
Part I of this Article describes the context in which the issues of corporate governance typically a...
Professor Lander responds to Professor Martin’s article by pointing out that the issue may not be so...
It is a commonplace, but nonetheless true: the study of bankruptcy has attained a new respectability...
The length of time companies remain in bankruptcy reorganization is critically important. During tha...
(Excerpt) In 2005, following years of intensive lobbying by the consumer credit industry, the focus ...