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Cardozo Law Review

Abstract

Corporate and consumer bankruptcy are defined by two principal features: a compulsory process and an identifiable set of priorities to debtor property. These "rule of law"features reduce borrowing costs ex ante by, among other things, discouraging rent-seeking ex post. Municipal bankruptcy, by contrast, despite apparent similarities, embodies a radically different vision of debt adjustment. Substantive priorities in Chapter 9 are riddled with uncertainty, and the very invocation of bankruptcy is subject to veto by multiple actors. Consequently, this Article contends that familiar models of bankruptcy are inadequate to explain the existing regime of municipal debt adjustment. What Chapter 9 creates is less a forum for the application of settled law, and more an ad hoc legislative venue, in which multiple political bodies seek to apportion resources by mutual consent. Political economy rather than contract enforcement theory supplies the appropriate lens. This Article traces some of the implications of this view and argues that, relative to a system of rights enforcement, municipal bankruptcy as we know it leads to too few bankruptcies and at the same time increases the costs offinancing city services and impoverishes residents, employees, and retirees. Reformers would do well to keep in mind a simple slogan: more law, less legislation.

Disciplines

Bankruptcy Law | Labor and Employment Law | Law | Legal History | Legislation | State and Local Government Law

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