This book examines the outcomes of the economic law reforms in Asian
developing countries, guided by the leading international development
financiers such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.
Included is a particular focus on the recent "insolvency law" reforms in
the Asian emerging economies, such as Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar. Such
legal reforms are the results of the "transplant" of the model law
provided by these donor agencies, a law that was created in the
post-Asian Currency Crisis in the 1990s. This book therefore examines
the outcomes of three decades of donor-guided legal reforms.
Appropriately, it applies not only the static approach to the legal
texts but also an empirical methodology through interview surveys of the
corporate and financial sectors.
Following the introduction in Chapter I, Chapter II reviews the basic
theories and presents the methodological framework. Chapter III then
analyzes the contents of insolvency law reforms in the major target
countries, namely, Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar. Chapter IV provides a
closer investigation into the design choices of Myanmar's 2020
Insolvency Law as a typical example of the law reform involving the
inter-donor conflict of law models between the Asian Development Bank
and Japan's official development assistance project. Lastly, Chapter V
applies an empirical approach to the functioning of insolvency law,
through international collaboration for interview surveys with small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and their financiers.