Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Paul Goldsmith, who is introducing a new licensing regime for insolvency practitioners, said between 10 and 20 percent of them fall short of reasonable expectations.
Goldsmith is introducing a co-regulatory licensing system where professional bodies, such as the Recovery, Insolvency and Turnaround Association of NZ and Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand, will carry out the frontline regulation.
The Registrar of Companies will monitor and report on the effectiveness of their systems and processes. The Registrar would also be empowered to guard against the frontline regulators imposing excessive barriers to entry.
Provisions in the Companies Act and Receiverships Act will also be strengthened, including creditors' powers relating to appointing and replacing insolvency practitioners and providing the High Court with workable powers to remove and ban incompetent, dishonest and unprofessional insolvency practitioners. Currently there is little financial incentive for creditors to seek to enforce the duties, particularly when practitioners liquidate small to medium sized companies (SMEs).
Hundreds of New Zealand companies go into liquidation, receivership or administration each year with outstanding debts running into many millions of dollars and Goldsmith said it was essential there is a high level of trust and transparency around the process.
In a Cabinet paper on the proposed changes, Goldsmith said most of the hundred or so practitioners who regularly take appointments administer insolvencies in a professional manner but "it appears that there are 10 to 20 practitioners at any one time who consistency fall below reasonable expectations".