Small Business Reorganization Act, HAVEN Act, Family Farmer Relief Act and National Guard and Reservists Debt Relief Extension Act Pass Out of House Judiciary Committee

Small Business Reorganization Act, HAVEN Act, Family Farmer Relief Act and National Guard and Reservists Debt Relief Extension Act Pass Out of House Judiciary Committee

ABI Bankruptcy Brief

July 11, 2019

 
ABI Bankruptcy Brief
 
NEWS AND ANALYSIS

Small Business Reorganization Act, HAVEN Act, Family Farmer Relief Act and National Guard and Reservists Debt Relief Extension Act Pass Out of House Judiciary Committee

The House Judiciary Committee brought forth a number of key pieces of bankruptcy legislation today at its mark-up hearing. The following bills were considered en bloc and reported favorably out of Committee for consideration by the House of Representatives:

- H.R. 3311, the “Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019”;

- H.R. 3304, the “National Guard and Reservists Debt Relief Extension Act of 2019”;

- H.R. 2938, the “Honoring American Veterans in Extreme Need Act of 2019” (“HAVEN Act”);

- and H.R. 2336, the “Family Farmer Relief Act of 2019”

ABI testified in support of H.R. 3311, 2938 and 2336 at the House Judiciary Committee's hearing on June 25.

To view the text of the bills and watch a replay of the mark-up hearing (consideration of the bankruptcy bills occurs during the final 10 minutes of the hearing), please click here.

Commentary: Canceling All Student Debt Is a Bad Idea* 

Canceling existing student debt would make millions of us who took out student loans, worked hard, lived frugally and paid off (or are paying off) what they borrowed feel like suckers, according to a Washington Post commentary. While Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) or Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) tout proposals of taxpayers picking up the student debt tab, there are other strategies to tackling the growing problem of student loan debt, according to the commentary. For starters, let’s change the law so student debt can be discharged in bankruptcy. As things stand now, you can be so far underwater financially you need a submarine, but you can’t get rid of your student debt in bankruptcy the way you can get rid of unpayable medical or credit card debts. Letting people get rid of their student debt by going broke isn’t giving them a free ride: their financial foul-ups are public record and their credit is ruined for years, according to the commentary. Making student loans dischargeable in bankruptcy would put lenders at risk and make them pay attention to what they’re doing. Another thing we could do is expand the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. That way, we could get a lot more people serving in the military or teaching in remote rural areas or practicing medicine there, doing public service and having some of their student debt canceled year by year. Yes, that puts us taxpayers on the hook for canceling student debt, but it’s not handing people a debt-cancellation freebie: It’s a trade. Do socially useful work, earn loan forgiveness.



*The views expressed in this commentary are from the author/publication cited, are meant for informative purposes only, and are not an official position of ABI.

Treatment of student loan debt in bankruptcy is the first topic addressed in the Final Report of ABI's Commission on Consumer Bankruptcy. To download a copy of the report, please click here.

To hear additional perspectives on the Commission's recommendations on student loan debt in bankruptcy, listen to this ABI Podcast.

Analysis: Big Law Bills More than $160 Million in Puerto Rico's Bankruptcy

Roughly 45 firms working on Puerto Rico’s debt restructuring, including top-tier firms such as Proskauer Rose, Norton Rose Fulbright, DLA Piper and Greenberg Traurig, have billed more than $400 million collectively in the two years since the restructuring began, American Lawyer reported. Firms in the Am Law 100 account for more than $160 million in fees and expenses. Analysts estimate that the total amount of debt tied to Puerto Rico’s restructuring totals more than $100 billion, far exceeding the second-largest municipal reorganization: Detroit, estimated at $18 billion. The $160 million figure does not include fees billed by several Am Law 100 firms that were not required to report expenses, as they do not represent the government. Those include Foley & Lardner; Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher; Dechert; Holland & Knight; and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. In total, at least a quarter of the Am Law 100 is in some way involved in Puerto Rico’s debt restructuring, according to an independent analysis of court filings by The American Lawyer and filings from Puerto Rico’s Financial and Management Oversight Board.



‘Reshoring’ Report Finds Factory Work Not Returning to U.S.

A report released yesterday stated that American trade policies aimed in part at returning factory work to the U.S. appear instead to be accelerating a shift in production from China to Vietnam and other low-cost nations, the Wall Street Journal reported. Despite escalating tariffs between the U.S. and China, American imports of manufactured goods from China and 13 other Asian countries rose 9 percent in 2018 to $816 billion, the largest annual increase in nearly a decade and outpacing a 6 percent increase in domestic manufacturing gross output, according to consulting firm A.T. Kearney Inc. The firm said that its annual index measuring the ratio of U.S. imports of Asian-made goods as a percentage of domestic manufacturing output reached 13.1 percent in 2018, up from 12.7 percent in 2017 and the highest A.T. Kearney has found in the past 10 years.


 

Commentary: Global Recession Risks Are Up, and Central Banks Aren’t Ready*

Ten years after the Federal Reserve worked alongside the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan to bring the global economy back from the brink, their ability to prevent the next downturn is limited, according to a New York Times commentary. Whether the world’s central banks are prepared to combat another slump is becoming less of a hypothetical question as the global economy shows signs of strain. The chances that the U.S. will enter a recession by next year have grown as manufacturing weakens and trade uncertainty drags on. In Germany, the unemployment rate has ticked higher, and industrial production is slowing. In Japan, weak factory production and waning exports heighten vulnerability. A recession is far from inevitable — particularly one as deep and painful as the last. But the capacity for the type of decisive response that prevented an even worse outcome in 2008 has been hindered. Back then, central banks cut rates, bought up bonds, extended government backing to financial products, lent money to banks and in some cases coordinated with government authorities to make sure their rescue packages didn’t work at cross-purposes. It was an unprecedented period of experimentation, one that saved economies careening toward collapse. But today, interest rates remain below zero in Japan and Europe. They also are low by historical standards in the U.S., leaving less room to cut in a downturn. Most central banks still hold huge amounts of the bonds and other securities they bought to prop up their economies the last time, which could make another buying binge more difficult and dampen its effects.



*The views expressed in this commentary are from the author/publication cited, are meant for informative purposes only, and are not an official position of ABI.

Eleventh Circuit Accepting Applications for Bankruptcy Judgeship Position in the Middle District of Florida at Orlando

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit is seeking applications from all highly qualified candidates for a 14-year appointment as U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the Middle District of Florida at Orlando. All applications must be received by Aug. 1. For qualifications and submission guidelines, please click here.

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BLOG EXCHANGE

New on ABI’s Bankruptcy Blog Exchange: House Votes to Protect VA Loans, Promote Counseling for FHA Borrowers

The House of Representatives has passed a bill that would clarify how certain loans backed by the Department of Veterans Affairs are securitized, along with legislation encouraging first-time homebuyers to participate in counseling programs, according to a recent blog post.

To read more on this blog and all others on the ABI Blog Exchange, please click here.

 
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