Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code — Economic Framework
Economic Framework
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016, is a transformative legislation in India aimed at consolidating and reforming the laws related to insolvency and bankruptcy. It provides a unified, time-bound, and creditor-driven framework for resolving financial distress of companies, partnership firms, and individuals.
The core objective is to maximize the value of assets, promote entrepreneurship, and ensure credit availability, thereby improving the ease of doing business. The IBC replaced a fragmented legal landscape, which previously led to significant delays and poor recovery rates for creditors, exacerbating the Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) crisis in the banking sector.
The Code introduces a structured process, primarily the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) for companies. This process can be initiated by financial creditors (Section 7), operational creditors (Section 9), or the corporate debtor itself (Section 10).
Once initiated, a moratorium is declared, halting all legal actions against the debtor. An Interim Resolution Professional (IRP) takes control, followed by the formation of a Committee of Creditors (CoC), comprising financial creditors.
The CoC, with a 66% voting share, approves a resolution plan submitted by prospective bidders. If approved by the NCLT, the company is revived; otherwise, it proceeds to liquidation.
Key institutions supporting the IBC include the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) as the Adjudicating Authority, the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) for appeals, and the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) as the overarching regulator.
Insolvency Professionals (IPs) are crucial intermediaries who manage the resolution process. Significant amendments, like Section 29A, prevent unscrupulous promoters from regaining control, and the introduction of Pre-packaged Insolvency Resolution Process (PPIRP) for MSMEs, reflect the Code's continuous evolution.
The IBC's 'non-obstante' clause (Section 238) ensures its supremacy over other laws, providing legal certainty and expediting resolution.
Important Differences
vs SARFAESI Act and DRT Act
| Aspect | This Topic | SARFAESI Act and DRT Act |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Objective | IBC (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code) | SARFAESI Act (Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act) |
| Focus | Resolution of corporate debtor (revival) or orderly liquidation; value maximization. | Recovery of secured debts by banks/FIs without court intervention. |
| Scope | Corporate persons, partnership firms, individuals (unified framework). | Secured creditors (banks/FIs) against secured assets. |
| Initiation | Financial creditor, operational creditor, or corporate debtor. | Secured creditor (bank/FI) after NPA classification. |
| Adjudicating Authority | NCLT (for corporate), DRT (for individuals/firms). | No judicial intervention initially; DRT/High Court for appeals. |
| Moratorium | Mandatory upon admission of CIRP, halting all legal actions. | No general moratorium; specific actions against secured assets. |
| Priority | IBC's 'waterfall mechanism' (Section 53) overrides other laws (Section 238). | Secured creditors have priority over unsecured creditors for secured assets. |
| Timeline | Time-bound (180/270/330 days for CIRP). | Faster recovery for secured assets, but can be challenged. |
| UPSC Relevance | Core of economic reforms, NPA resolution, ease of doing business. Focus on 'resolution' over 'recovery'. | Direct recovery mechanism for banks, bypassing courts. Important for banking sector stability. |