Insolvency Dartford

As globalisation has created international bankruptcies, insolvency courts in different countries have had to deal with each other more often and have begun to see the advantages in making their systems more compatible – and they are tending to chose the US approach.

Ross Green & Crowe Ltd
01322 225353
23-25 Copperfields Shopping Centre
Dartford
Baily & Goff
01322 220235
53-55 Spital Street
Dartford
Neves Scott
01322 277732
82 High Street
Dartford
Legal 2 Retail Ltd
01322 272911
65 Havelock Road
Dartford
Adams & Moore Ltd
01322 279292
73 Lowfield Street
Dartford
Howard Outred & Co Solicitors
01322 224881
57 Hythe Street
Dartford
Robin Murray & Co
01322 228898
23 Highfield Road
Dartford
T G Baynes Ltd
01322 295555
Baynes House
Dartford
Cook Taylor Woodhouse
01322 223223
12 High Street
Dartford
Robin Murray & Co
01322 665500
St. Albans House
Dartford
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Insolvency

insolvencyThe issue of insolvency shows how different attitudes to business in the US can be to those in Europe. In America, going bust can carry no stigma at all – people can even get plaudits for having tried their hand at entrepreneurship. In Europe, bankruptcy has traditionally been associated with failure, shame and punishment.

But the US is winning the argument and the rest of the world is starting to copy its approach. Broadly speaking, territories can be divided into two types on the subject of insolvency – those that favour the debtor and those that favour the creditors. The US has been a great exponent of favouring the debtor and US law is much more about trying to reach a resolution and letting the debtor go forward again.

As globalisation has created international bankruptcies, insolvency courts in different countries have had to deal with each other more often and have begun to see the advantages in making their systems more compatible – and they are tending to chose the US approach. In Sweden, for example, one of the biggest company restructurings in 2006 ended up not with the death of the business, but with it doubling size (after acquiring another) and with the original owners keeping 25% of the shares.

In the past decade, several countries have revamped their insolvency laws, including Germany, Belgium, England, Spain and France.

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