The law of corporate reorganizations is conventionally justified as a way to preserve a firm’s going-concern value: Specialized assets in a particular firm are worth more together in that firm than anywhere else. This paper shows that this notion is mistaken. Its flaw is that it lacks a well-developed understanding of the nature of a firm. Initially, it is easy to confuse size with specialization and overstate the extent to which assets are dedicated to a particular enterprise. Even when such dedicated assets exist, they often do not need to stay in the same firm. As Coase taught us, as the costs of contracting go down, so too does the value of keeping assets in a particular firm. But even when specialized assets must be kept inside a firm,...
"Reorganization or Liquidation: Bankruptcy Choice and Firm Dynamics" by Dean Corbae and Pablo D'Eras...
This Article reports some of the results of an empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of l...
The modern approach to corporate reorganizations begins in a curious place. Everywhere else in corpo...
The law of corporate reorganizations is conventionally justified as a way to preserve a firm’s going...
In The End of Bankruptcy we set out the forces that have rendered obsolete traditional conceptions o...
In an article recently published in the Stanford Law Review Professors Douglas G. Baird and Robert K...
Corporate bankruptcy law theory has traditionally drawn a distinction between reorganising the compa...
What justifies corporate bankruptcy law in the modern economy? For forty years, economically oriente...
This article begins from a simple observation: Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code is th...
This Article argues that the ability of parties to shape their investments in firms is responsible f...
Governing a corporation during a Chapter 11 reorganization presents a special case of the age-old pr...
2001-03When a firm is under financial distress, it is optimal and efficient that the firm which is ...
Since the Enron scandal, good corporate governance has become increasingly important. Good bankruptc...
Like much of life, the study of bankruptcy is the study of leverage. Chapter 11 of the United States...
Bankruptcy is the legal process by which financially distressed firms, individuals, and occasionally...
"Reorganization or Liquidation: Bankruptcy Choice and Firm Dynamics" by Dean Corbae and Pablo D'Eras...
This Article reports some of the results of an empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of l...
The modern approach to corporate reorganizations begins in a curious place. Everywhere else in corpo...
The law of corporate reorganizations is conventionally justified as a way to preserve a firm’s going...
In The End of Bankruptcy we set out the forces that have rendered obsolete traditional conceptions o...
In an article recently published in the Stanford Law Review Professors Douglas G. Baird and Robert K...
Corporate bankruptcy law theory has traditionally drawn a distinction between reorganising the compa...
What justifies corporate bankruptcy law in the modern economy? For forty years, economically oriente...
This article begins from a simple observation: Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code is th...
This Article argues that the ability of parties to shape their investments in firms is responsible f...
Governing a corporation during a Chapter 11 reorganization presents a special case of the age-old pr...
2001-03When a firm is under financial distress, it is optimal and efficient that the firm which is ...
Since the Enron scandal, good corporate governance has become increasingly important. Good bankruptc...
Like much of life, the study of bankruptcy is the study of leverage. Chapter 11 of the United States...
Bankruptcy is the legal process by which financially distressed firms, individuals, and occasionally...
"Reorganization or Liquidation: Bankruptcy Choice and Firm Dynamics" by Dean Corbae and Pablo D'Eras...
This Article reports some of the results of an empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of l...
The modern approach to corporate reorganizations begins in a curious place. Everywhere else in corpo...