Earlier this week I wrote about the extensive data that have been made available to me by the Canadian bankruptcy regulator, the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB). The main element of the database is the balance sheet from every electronically filed consumer bankruptcy in Canada from 2005 to 2010.
One of the first things we (my PhD Student Vyacheslav Mikhed and I) have tried to do with this data is to measure the Financial Benefits of Bankruptcy (FBB) as reflected in the individual filer’s balance sheet.
The idea of FBB is taken from the paper of Fay, Hurst and White (American Economic Review, 2002, specifically page 708) and is simply the idea of measuring how much the bankruptcy filer gains through the discharge of unsecured debt minus the non-exempt assets the filer loses in bankruptcy. The larger the gains through unsecured debt discharged and the smaller the loss of non-exempt assets, the larger will be the financial benefits of bankruptcy to each individual filer.
