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Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation

Insolvency systems are fundamental to the functioning of commercial activity. They are essential for the development of credit markets and entrepreneurship, and raise the efficiency level of economies. South Africa’s business rescue regime is an innovative component of its insolvency system because...

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Main Author: Radford, Olivia Jordan
Other Authors: Bradstreet, Richard
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Radford, Olivia Jordan
author2 Bradstreet, Richard
author_browse Bradstreet, Richard
Radford, Olivia Jordan
author_facet Bradstreet, Richard
Radford, Olivia Jordan
author_sort Radford, Olivia Jordan
collection Thesis
description Insolvency systems are fundamental to the functioning of commercial activity. They are essential for the development of credit markets and entrepreneurship, and raise the efficiency level of economies. South Africa’s business rescue regime is an innovative component of its insolvency system because it encompasses more than creditors’ commercial interests; it aims to ensure the equitable treatment of multiple stakeholders such that social, economic and political interests are recognised and optimised as appropriate. However, equitable treatment does not equate to equal treatment. Business rescue organises the claims of stakeholders into a hierarchy. The ranking of tax claims within this hierarchy is controversial because various, divergent social, economic and political interests are implicated by a tax claim against an ailing corporation. This dissertation will assess whether tax claims should be granted some priority in South Africa’s business rescue claims hierarchy. The assessment of the different policy arguments for and against this priority will take place through the lens of corporate reorganisation’s values and policy. This is crucial so that the conclusion is consistent with corporate reorganisation’s objectives rather than being influenced by bias in favour of social or commercial interests.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30866 Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation Radford, Olivia Jordan Bradstreet, Richard Commercial Law Insolvency systems are fundamental to the functioning of commercial activity. They are essential for the development of credit markets and entrepreneurship, and raise the efficiency level of economies. South Africa’s business rescue regime is an innovative component of its insolvency system because it encompasses more than creditors’ commercial interests; it aims to ensure the equitable treatment of multiple stakeholders such that social, economic and political interests are recognised and optimised as appropriate. However, equitable treatment does not equate to equal treatment. Business rescue organises the claims of stakeholders into a hierarchy. The ranking of tax claims within this hierarchy is controversial because various, divergent social, economic and political interests are implicated by a tax claim against an ailing corporation. This dissertation will assess whether tax claims should be granted some priority in South Africa’s business rescue claims hierarchy. The assessment of the different policy arguments for and against this priority will take place through the lens of corporate reorganisation’s values and policy. This is crucial so that the conclusion is consistent with corporate reorganisation’s objectives rather than being influenced by bias in favour of social or commercial interests. 2020-02-05T07:46:46Z 2020-02-05T07:46:46Z 2019 2020-02-04T12:26:42Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30866 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Radford, Olivia Jordan
Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation
title_full Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation
title_fullStr Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation
title_full_unstemmed Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation
title_short Should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue: an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re-organisation
title_sort should tax claims be granted some priority in a business rescue an analysis through the framework of the values and policy underpinning corporate re organisation
topic Commercial Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30866
work_keys_str_mv AT radfordoliviajordan shouldtaxclaimsbegrantedsomepriorityinabusinessrescueananalysisthroughtheframeworkofthevaluesandpolicyunderpinningcorporatereorganisation