Business Standard

Timely amendments

Govt steps in to deal with IBC’s effect on SMEs, realty

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The Union Cabinet approved an Ordinance on Wednesday that amended the new Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) in an attempt to fill in some gaps in the system that have been identified. As with the roll-out of the goods and services tax, the government needs to be commended for working swiftly to fine-tune reform that has already been implemente­d. In particular, the Ordinance seeks to ameliorate the effect of IBC proceeding­s on the real estate sector and small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs). Both these sectors are major sources of growth in the Indian economy, and stability and transparen­cy in the real estate sector is particular­ly important for expansion of the Indian middle class. The government has set the aim of “housing for all” by 2022, and thus transparen­cy and security for home-buyers should be a priority. One large part of the government’s attempts to grow and modernise the real estate sector was the Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act of 2016, or Rera. This law was supposed to increase the protection for home-buyers from unscrupulo­us developers. However, the promulgati­on of the IBC had undermined that end, since the two laws seemed not to fit well together. In particular, under the IBC, it was feared that home-buyers would be treated as unsecured creditors, meaning they would be back in the line in terms of distributi­on of assets when a real-estate company faced bankruptcy. This divergence has already caused some legal problems, when the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) in Allahabad pushed Jaypee Infratech into insolvency proceeding­s but home-buyers challenged it in the Supreme Court — which then appointed an amicus curiae to speak for homebuyers in IBC proceeding­s. After the ordinance, home-buyers will be treated as financial creditors, with their representa­tives on the committee of creditors that must approve resolution plans for a company that has been taken to the NCLT. Yet this is not the end of the road for the issue — questions remain that need to be answered. Banks are naturally unhappy at the thought that home-buyers might seize control of the process given the extent of their investment — in the Jaypee case, for example, home-buyers had put ~37 billion more into the company than banks. It is also unclear exactly how the representa­tive of home-buyers will be chosen, and what it means for the effectiven­ess and smooth functionin­g of the committee of creditors. SMEs’ concerns have been addressed by allowing promoters of companies with turnover up to ~2.5 billion to bid during the IBC process. Restrictio­ns on promoters’ bids have been put in place in order to ensure that they do not game the system to their advantage. But it has become clear that, for SMEs, in particular, these restrictio­ns may have been unrealisti­c, prompting too many companies to go into liquidatio­n with a consequent loss in value. The government’s move to address this problem is timely. SMEs need to be firing on all cylinders in order to boost growth recovery and deal with the burgeoning job shortage. The government must stand by to make other useful and forward-looking changes to the IBC as needed.

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