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As India prepares for the next generation of insolvency reforms — especially with discussions around the (IBC) Amendment Bill 2025— one question keeps resurfacing:

Should India shift from a “Creditor-In-Control” (CIC) model to a “Debtor-In-Possession” (DIP) model, similar to the US Chapter 11 system? This is more than a legal debate. It impacts revival outcomes, promoter accountability, investor confidence, and the overall speed of resolution.

Here’s a clear and practical comparative analysis for professionals, lenders, and policymakers.

India’s Current Framework: Creditor-in-Control (CIC)

Under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), once CIRP begins:

  • The Board of Directors is suspended
  • Promoters lose control
  • A Resolution Professional takes charge
  • The CoC (creditors) control major decisions

This minimizes misuse, ensures transparency, and enforces creditor discipline in a country where promoter diversion was historically common. But it also comes with limitations:

  • RPs may lack deep operational knowledge
  • Transition delays can hurt business continuity
  • Promoters with genuine intent get sidelined
  • Buyers hesitate when the business deteriorates during CIRP

 US Model: Debtor-in-Possession (DIP)

In the US Chapter 11 system:

  • Existing management continues running the company
  • Court supervision prevents misuse
  • Creditors negotiate a restructuring plan
  • Financing (DIP financing) helps keep the business operational

This model is collaborative and relies heavily on transparency, strong governance, and strict penal consequences for fraud.

Advantages include:

√ continuity of operations

√ better preservation of value

√ faster restructuring negotiations

√ existing management knowledge retained

But it also assumes:

→ promoters behave responsibly

→ books are reliable

→ courts and creditors have strong oversight mechanisms

India historically has challenges in these areas.

Comparative Snapshot: CIC vs DIP

Feature India (CIC) US (DIP)
Who controls the business? Creditors + RP Debtor management
Risk of fraud/diversion Low Higher (unless governance strong)
Speed of revival Moderate Faster
Value preservation Often weak due to operational disruption Stronger
Lender confidence High Mixed
Promoter role Minimal Significant
Market maturity required Medium Very high

Could DIP Work in India? Only Under Specific Conditions

Moving to a DIP model for all companies would be risky in India, but it might work selectively.

A DIP-style framework can work for:

  • MSMEs with clean books and honest promoters
  • Startups where IP/founder knowledge is critical
  • Sectors where promoter involvement is essential for continuity
  • Companies with early-stage insolvency, not deep distress

For larger corporates with complex fraud risks, CIC remains safer.

Possible Hybrid Approach for India

India does not need to copy the US system — it can adopt a hybrid model:

1. Debtor-in-Possession Only for CoC-Approved Promoters

Allow DIP only when creditors agree that management is reliable.

2. Strict Monitoring by RP (Supervisory Role)

RP supervises operations while promoters run day-to-day business.

3. Mandatory Digital Access & Real-Time Reporting

Centralised audited data room → eliminates manipulation.

4. DIP Financing Framework

India lacks a formal equivalent; it must be created.

5. Harsh Penalties for Misuse

Any diversion → immediate shift to CIC.

This hybrid can offer operational continuity without compromising lender protection.

 Challenges India Must Solve Before DIP Can Work

  • Weak governance in many companies
  • Non-cooperation by promoters
  • Incomplete financial records
  • No DIP financing market
  • Limited forensic and oversight capacity
  • NCLT delays

Until these systemic issues are addressed, DIP cannot replace CIC entirely.

Conclusion: DIP Is Not a Replacement — But a Selective Upgrade

India’s Creditor-In-Control model has built discipline and accountability. Shifting fully to a Debtor-In-Possession model could be risky without stronger governance systems. But a selective, hybrid DIP framework could:

√ preserve business value

√ fast-track MSME revival

√ improve operational continuity

√ support promoter-driven restructurings

√ reduce liquidation rates

As the IBC evolves in 2025 and beyond, the future likely lies in mixing the strengths of both models — not choosing one over the other.

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Author Note: The author is an Insolvency Resolution Professional with extensive experience in managing multiple CIRP and liquidation assignments. For queries or professional discussions related to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), you may reach out to: Krit Narayan Mishra at kritmassociates@gmail.com | +91 99108 59116.

Author Bio

I am Insolvency Professional and Registered Valuer, LL.B, FCA, ACMA, MBF. I have more than 23 years of experience in finance, merger and acquisition, business valuation and insolvency. I have done valuation of around 200 cases. I have established myself in last 8 years in practice as Insolvency P View Full Profile

My Published Posts

Revival Fund under IBC: A Practitioner’s Roadmap from Proposal to Execution Homebuyer Claims vs Financial Creditor Status: Evolving Jurisprudence under IBC NCLT/NCLAT Delay Index: How Adjudicatory Backlogs Undermine Value Realisation under IBC Beyond MSMEs: Can Pre-Pack Insolvency Framework Be Expanded to Mid & Large Corporates? Resolution Below Liquidation Value: Commercial Wisdom or Legal Time Bomb? View More Published Posts

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