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American Law and Economics Review V6 N2 2004 (249-284)
American Law and Economics Review Vol. 6 No. 2, © American Law and Economics Association 2004; all rights reserved.

Protection for Whom? Creditor Conflict and Bankruptcy

Stanley D. Longhofer

Wichita State University

Stephen R. Peters

Kansas State University

Send correspondence to: Stanley D. Longhofer, Wichita State University, Barton School of Business, 1845 N. Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0077; E-mail: stan.longhofer{at}wichita.edu.

In the absence of a bankruptcy law, private debt collection remedies generally result in an ad hoc disposal of the debtor's assets, which reduces the aggregate value of creditors' claims. We show that creditors will often choose not to write private contracts that would prevent this inefficient behavior, even though these contracts would be to the mutual benefit of all creditors. Our analysis therefore provides an economic rationale for the existence of a bankruptcy law that makes a collective resolution compulsory for all creditors. We argue that such a mandate is a requisite part of any effective bankruptcy system, including proposals for market-based resolutions of insolvency.


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