Do Changes in Chapter 7 Asset Exemptions Fundamentally Alter Bankruptcy Outcomes? New Evidence From the State of Oregon

Authors

  • Donald D. Hackney Gonzaga University
  • Daniel L. Friesner North Dakota State University
  • Matthew Q. McPherson Gonzaga University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jaf.v20i5.3186

Keywords:

Accounting, Finance, consumer bankruptcy, asset exemptions, debtor choice provisions, spreadsheet modelling

Abstract

Hackney, Friesner, and McPherson (2018) developed a methodology to identify the optimal distribution of discharged debts in Chapter 7 bankruptcy filings. In 2013, Oregon adopted debtor-choice status. Applying the methodology to data from Oregon immediately before, during, and after, the conversion to debtor choice status should facilitate an accurate assessment of the impact of debtor-choice status on the distribution of debt disbursements. The results suggest that the optimal proportion of assets retained by households through exemptions is between 3-4% of all disbursements, and that the legislation did not noticeably impact convergence to this optimum proportion.

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Published

2020-11-10

How to Cite

Hackney, D. D., Friesner, D. L., & McPherson, M. Q. (2020). Do Changes in Chapter 7 Asset Exemptions Fundamentally Alter Bankruptcy Outcomes? New Evidence From the State of Oregon. Journal of Accounting and Finance, 20(5). https://doi.org/10.33423/jaf.v20i5.3186

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Articles