Dictionary Definition
insolvent adj : unable to meet or discharge
financial obligations; "an insolvent person"; "an insolvent estate"
[ant: solvent] n :
someone who has insufficient assets to cover their debts [syn:
bankrupt]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Of or pertaining to bankruptcy.
Translations
of or pertaining to bankruptcy
- German: insolvent
German
Adjective
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Insolvency exists for a person or organization
when total financial liabilities exceed total
financial assets. A
related financial condition, sometimes referred to as cash-flow
insolvency, exists when a person or organization can not meet its
financial obligations as they come due. In business situations,
accountants in the US refer to this as a
working
capital deficit.
Insolvency is not a synonym for bankruptcy, which in the
US is a
determination of insolvency made by a court of
law with resulting legal orders intended to resolve the
insolvency.
The principal focus of modern insolvency
legislation and business debt
restructuring practices no longer rests on the liquidation and
elimination of insolvent entities but on the remodeling of the
financial and organizational structure of debtors experiencing
financial
distress so as to permit the rehabilitation and continuation of
their business. In some jurisdictions, it is an offence under the insolvency
laws for a corporation to continue in
business while insolvent. In others, the business may continue
under a declared protective arrangement while alternative options
to achieve recovery are worked out. Increasingly, legislatures have
favoured alternatives to winding up companies for good.
It can be grounds for a civil action, or even an
offence, to continue to pay some creditors in preference to
other creditors once a state of insolvency is reached.
Debt Restructuring
Out-of court debt restructurings, also known as workouts, are increasingly becoming a global reality. Debt restructurings are typically handled by professional insolvency and restructruing practitioners, and are usually less expensive and a preferrable alternative to bankruptcy.Debt
restructuring is a process that allows a private or public
company - or a sovereign entity - facing cash flow problems and
financial distress, to reduce and renegotiate its deliquent debts
in order to improve or restore liquidity and rehabilitate so that
it can continue its operations.
South Africa
In South Africa, owners of businesses that had at any stage traded insolvently (i.e. that had a balance-sheet insolvency) become personally liable for the business' debts. Trading insolvently is often regarded as normal business practice in South Africa, as long as the business is able to fulfil its debt obligations when they fall due.United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, it is a criminal offence to trade whilst insolvent. However, there are insolvency practices ("Administrators") which aim to protect the creditors of the insolvent individual or company and balance their respective interests. Alternatives such as Company Voluntary Arrangements and Administration in the UK reflect this shift towards a rescue culture.When determining whether a gift or a payment to a
creditor is an unlawful preference, both the date of the insolvency
and the date of the bankruptcy – the liquidator or
administrator will be able to recover money paid to a creditor as a preference if
paid within six months (or two years if the creditor is a person
connected to the company) preceding the date of liquidation and the
company was insolvent at the time. In addition to unlawful
preferences, liquidators and administrators in the UK may also
challenge transactions at an undervalue, extortionate credit
transactions, some floating charges and transactions defrauding
creditors.
In the UK, the term bankruptcy is reserved for
individuals; a company which is insolvent may be put into liquidation (sometimes
referred to as winding-up).
United States
Under the Uniform Commercial Code, a person is considered "insolvent" when the party has ceased to pay its debts in the ordinary course of business, or cannot pay its debts as they become due, or is insolvent within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code. This is important because certain rights under the code may be invoked against an insolvent party which are otherwise unavailable.The United
States has established insolvency regimes which aim to protect
the creditors of the insolvent individual or company and balance
their respective interests. For example, see
Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code.
In determining whether a gift or a payment to a
creditor is an unlawful preference, the date of the insolvency,
rather than the date of the legally-declared bankruptcy, will
usually be the primary consideration.
Government debt
Although the terms bankrupt and insolvent are often used in reference to governments or government obligations, a government cannot be insolvent in the normal sense of the word. Generally, a government's debt is not secured by the assets of the government, but by its ability to levy taxes. By the standard definition, all governments would be in a state of insolvency unless they had assets equal to the debt they owed. If, for any reason, a government cannot meet its interest obligation, it is technically not insolvent but is "in default". As governments are sovereign entities, persons who hold debt of the government cannot seize the assets of the government to re-pay the debt. However, in most cases, debt in default is refinanced by further borrowing or monetized by issuing more currency (which typically results in inflation and may result in hyperinflation).Bibliography
- Born Losers: A History of Failure in America, by Scott A. Sandage (Harvard University Press, 2005).
References
See also
External links
insolvent in German: Insolvenz
insolvent in Spanish: Insolvencia
insolvent in Japanese: 債務超過
insolvent in Dutch: Insolventie
insolvent in Polish: Upadłość
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
bankrupt, broke, broken, busted, destitute, down-and-out,
failed, failure, fortuneless, homeless, impoverished, in Queer
Street, in receivership, in the gutter, in the red, indebted, insolvent debtor,
lame duck, landless,
moneyless, on the
rocks, out of funds, penniless, propertyless, ruined, unsound, wiped out, without a
sou