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Strategic Bankruptcy - How Corporations and Creditors Use Chapter 11 to Their Advantage (Paperback, Revised)
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Strategic Bankruptcy - How Corporations and Creditors Use Chapter 11 to Their Advantage (Paperback, Revised)
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In 1982 Johns-Manville, a major asbestos manufacturer, declares
itself insolvent to avoid paying claims resulting from exposure to
its products. A year later, Continental Airlines, one of the top
ten carriers in the United States, claims a deficit when the union
resists plans to cut labor costs. Later still, oil powerhouse
Texaco cries broke rather than pay damages resulting from a
courtroom defeat by archrival Pennzoil. Bankruptcy, once a term
that sent shudders up a manager's spine, is now becoming a potent
weapon in the corporate arsenal. In his timely and challenging
study, Kevin Delaney explores this profound change in our legal
landscape, where corporations with billions of dollars in assets
use bankruptcy to achieve specific political and organizational
objectives. As a consequence, bankruptcy court is rapidly becoming
an arena in which crucial social issues are resolved: How and when
will people dying of asbestos poisoning be compensated? Can
companies unilaterally break legally negotiated labor contracts?
What are the ethical and legal rules of the corporate takeover
game? In probing the Chapter 11 bankruptcies of Johns-Manville,
Frank Lorenzo's Continental Airlines, and Texaco, Delaney shows
that more and more, an array of powerful actors--corporations,
commercial creditors, auditors, bond rating agencies and investment
bankers--are coming to view bankruptcy as a legitimate business
strategy. In each situation, the choice of bankruptcy by these
corporate giants was directly influenced by the surrounding
business community. In the case of Johns-Manville, carrying
appropriate insurance did not prevent its twenty insurance
companies from refusing to pay claims. Thanks to shrewdplanning and
cooperation from Continental's creditors, not only was the airline
able to continue flying in the first week of Chapter 11, but it
could also offer the lowest cross-country fare in the market.
Texaco's banks nudged their client toward bankruptcy as a way to
squeeze it into compliance with banking conventions it had
previously bypassed. Strategic Bankruptcy uncovers the ways in
which bankruptcy has become a biased political system of allocating
scarce resources. Delaney's in-depth investigation of three recent
bankruptcies and his searing expose of current corporate practices
make this book essential reading for corporate executives, lawyers,
legislators, and policymakers.
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