Course Content
Lesson 1.1 – Purpose of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA)
Estimated Time: 45–60 minutes Learning Objectives Understand why the BIA exists Understand the balance between debtor relief and creditor protection Recognize insolvency as a legal remedy, not a moral failure Key Concepts The BIA is federal legislation designed to: Provide honest but unfortunate debtors a path to relief Ensure fair and orderly treatment of creditors Preserve confidence in the credit system Insolvency law is designed to create structure during financial distress Outcomes are governed by statute, not discretion
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Lesson 1.7 – CONSEQUENCES OF NON-COMPLIANCE
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Litvack Group Sales Training – Lesson 1 – Insolvency System and Trustee Authority

Balancing Debtor Relief and Creditor Protection

 

 

One of the core purposes of the BIA is balance. The Act is designed to provide relief to honest but unfortunate debtors while simultaneously protecting the rights of creditors. These goals exist in tension with one another, and insolvency law exists precisely to manage that tension fairly.

If insolvency law focused only on debtor relief, creditors would lose confidence in lending. If it focused only on creditor recovery, debtors would be trapped indefinitely. The BIA balances these competing interests by imposing duties, disclosure requirements, and structured outcomes that neither side controls unilaterally.

 

 

Key Anchors:

 

  • Debtor relief is conditional

  • Creditor rights remain protected

  • Balance preserves confidence in credit

This balance explains why insolvency outcomes are regulated rather than negotiated.