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Published byClara Cobb Modified over 9 years ago
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BBL sponsored by the Municipal Finance Thematic Group Municipal Insolvency Principles and Practice -- Comparing the Cases of Hungary and South Africa Wednesday, April 7 Presenters: Matt Glasser, AFTU1, and Mihaly Kopanyi, TUDUR, World Bank
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Introduction Does municipal insolvency matter? Local governments often face financial troubles: overdue debt, unpaid suppliers’ bills, tax arrears Three basic scenarios No-rule scenario: often entails moral hazard and bail- out by the sovereign government Insolvency legislation: rule-based treatment of troubled cases Use corporate bankruptcy law: works well in the US but may lead to no-rule scenario in developing countries
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Dealing with Municipal Insolvency Hungary’s Experiences in Policy, Legislation, and Practice Mihaly Kopanyi Sr. Municipal Finance specialist TUDUR Urban Development Unit
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Municipal Borrowing and Insolvency Pre-transition State guarantee on deposits and on municipal debt 1990 – 1995 Principle: No state guarantee on municipal debt (LG Act) Practice: Implicit guarantee and discretionary bail out 1996 – 2003 Act on Municipal Debt Resolution 1996 CG statement on No Bail out unless Parliament approval 19 M Bankruptcy Procedure Commenced, + about 100 out-of court agreements between 1996 and 2003
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Act on Municipal Debt Adjustment 1996 Objectives Prevent and preempt M defaults Maintain public services in defaulted M Clear admin and legal procedure for those affected Rule-based reorganization and workout procedure Allow market expansion of M debt as revenues increase Sovereign guarantee need Parliament authorization in the national budget
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Debt Resolution Process Petition to court NO Process halted, appeal possible Enterprise Registry Trustee appointed Debt Committee Notice to creditors Emergency Budget Reorganization Plan Compromised workout Debt w-o plan signed Submission of Plan to Court Publication of Plan closure of w-o process no appeal possible Court order for inventory of assets for liquidation NO Agreement Trustee prepares a liquidation report for Court approval Court approves liquidation plan appeal possible Assets liquidated, creditors paid Trustee paid Publication of outcome Closure of DR Agreement Justified
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An Out-of-court Resolution - Tokaj External audit on M institutions and management end-1995 Consolidate/merge institutions and reduce staff by 15 % Set up a municipal treasury, improved cash management and liquidity Zero based Budgeting and new financial information system Renegotiate debt with the lead bank and suppliers Results: Solvency restored and deficit reduced (HUF34 mo by 1997), balanced budget since 1998, Increased liquidity and cost efficiency Solid city development since 1998.
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Insolvency Procedures 1996-2003
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Lesson learned #1 Key Factors in Avoiding Bankruptcy Petition Early debt restructuring with all lenders and vendors Rationalization of M budgetary institutions Municipal treasury (soft or hard) Internal audit and reduction of staff Decrease voluntary M services Enhance internal control and asset liability management LAST RESORT: Application for a deficit grant (grant for bridging gaps in the operational budget)
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Lessons Learned #2 Cautious, market driven borrowing Strong incentives for timely out-of-court resolution Poor financial and project mgmt. skills at local level MBr Act does not constrain lending Banks view the MBr Act overly protects borrowers Councilors and M executives can not be held personally liable for default MBr Act does not constrain M borrowing (the M sector is 70% below borrowing ceiling)
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