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7 Eur. Bus. Org. L. Rev. 1 (2006)

handle is hein.journals/eunbuioiz7 and id is 1 raw text is: 










European Business Organization Law Review 7: 1-3                           1
© 2006 T.M.CASSER PRESS   DOI10.1017/S 1566752906000012


Guest Editorial


This issue of EBOR presents to a wider audience the papers and proceedings of a
symposium  on  'Efficient Creditor Protection in European Company Law', which
took place from 1 to 3 December 2005 at the premises of the Max Planck Institute
in Munich, as a joint venture of Munich's Ludwig Maximilian University and the
Max  Planck Institute for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law. As the
organisers of this conference, we  were  proud  and  delighted that so many
outstanding scholars from Europe and the United States agreed to participate, give
presentations, make comments and contribute to the discussions, although we had
nothing to offer but a lot of preparatory work, uncomfortable winter travel and the
prospect of exchanging some views  on questions of corporate law reform in our
conference room. We  would also like to express our gratitude to the Max Planck
Society for the Advancement of Sciences for its generous financial support of the
conference and this publication.
   It is well known that reform of the European rules on creditor protection in
company  law is imminent. The long-standing instrument of 'legal capital', which
was virtually abolished in the United States some decades ago, has come under
severe pressure in Europe as well. The reasons are manifold. Academic work on
both sides of the Atlantic shows  a tendency that traditional mandatory rules
should give way  to individual solutions which are freely negotiated between
creditors and corporate debtors, supported by increased disclosure obligations of
firms. The High  Level Group  of Company   Law   Experts (Winter Group)  has
recommended   reassessing the merits of legal capital and examining alternative
systems of creditor protection. Moreover, recent judgments of the European Court
of Justice have spurred regulatory competition between Member   States in the
field of company law, giving rise to a race (whether to the 'top' or to the 'bottom'
has to  be decided by  the beholder). Perhaps  the broadest challenge to the
incumbent  system stems from the Europe-wide  introduction of the International
Accounting  Standards/International Financial Reporting Standards which  are
designed to give full and fair information of a company's economic  situation.
However,  they are not conceptualised as the basis of rules on dividend payments
and other distributions under a capital maintenance regime. Last but not least, the
current debate on the legal and economic  effects of the European Insolvency
Regulation poses the question how  corporate law and insolvency law shall be
realigned in the future.
   Against this background, the organisers of the conference felt that it was time
to bring together some scholars and officials who are currently working on reform
projects in different Member States of the European Union and to invite other

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