City
Epaper

IBC has changed the culture; earlier regime was favorable to defaulting industrialists: SC Judge

By ANI | Updated: March 6, 2020 13:25 IST

Justice NV Ramana, a judge in the Supreme Court, on Friday said that the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 has changed the culture in the country adding that the earlier regime was more favourable to defaulting industrialists.

Open in App

New Delhi [India], Mar 6 : Justice NV Ramana, a judge in the Supreme Court, on Friday said that the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 has changed the culture in the country adding that the earlier regime was more favourable to defaulting industrialists.

"As per the newspaper reports, till February 2020, the realisable amount through cases resolved under IBC (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016) is around Rs 3.57 lakh crores. It is not a small figure. The advantage is that the earlier regime, that was more favorable to the industrialists who had taken the money. Now, it has changed the culture," Justice Ramana said at an event here.

He said that the IBC has brought a better credit culture in borrowers and they are more apprehensive of the litigation now.

"Another important thing is, now, they are very serious. Once if you start the insolvency proceedings, you will not only be losing the assets but facing the criminal prosecution also," Justice Ramana said.

"Big corporations and big people take loans amounting to thousands of crores of rupees. Banks liberally give the money. And thereafter they start some shell compes, acquire some land and install some missionary. Before starting the business itself, they will go for winding up. They will come before the High Court and file a petition for closing," he added.

Justice Ramana said that despite selling the properties of the company and passing a winding-up order, only 5 to 10 percent of the investment could be realised.

Suggesting that trust-building measures should be taken up by the government, the judge said," "I think it is better if we give some assurance or some sort of assurance or patting to them that if you are sincere and doing good business, the prosecution will be less."

Union Minister of Finance, Nirmala Sitharaman and Minister of State for Finance, Anurag Thakur and National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) Chairman Justice Sudhansu Jyoti Mukhopadhaya were also present at the event.

This comes as Sitharaman is expected to move the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Second Amendment) Bill, 2019 for consideration and passing in the Lok Sabha today.

( With inputs from ANI )

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalCM Mohan Yadav Performs Puja at Kashi Vishwanath Temple, Shares Spiritual Moment on Social Media

InternationalDestroyed Iranian missile launchers ready to strike Israel: IDF

BusinessCredit enquiries data suggests higher credit demand in rural and semi-urban areas

InternationalMiddle East airspace closure throws Kerala airports into chaos, normalcy expected soon

National'Guiding light for social justice', PM Modi inaugurates centenary celebration of Sree Narayana Guru-Gandhi talks

National Realted Stories

NationalMiddle East airspace closure throws Kerala airports into chaos, normalcy expected soon

MumbaiIndian Cricketer Shivam Dube Buys Two Luxury Apartments in Mumbai for ₹27.5 Crore

NationalRomil Vohra Encounter: Wanted Criminal Carrying Rs 3 Lakh Bounty Killed Near Haryana-Delhi Border

NationalGovt seals Rs 1,982 crore deals for defence hardware to beef up Army’s counter-terror capability

NationalThe greatest chapters of our story are still ahead: Gautam Adani on robust growth