India’s economic growth was choked for decades by a silent crisis known as the twin balance sheet problem. Promoters routinely ran corporate giants into the ground, leaving state-owned banks with mountains of toxic loans while maintaining their own lavish lifestyles.
The arrival of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) in 2016 fundamentally disrupted this setup. Celebrating its 10-year milestone, the IBC has transformed Indian capitalism from a “defaulter’s paradise” into a structured, creditor-led ecosystem. However, as the law enters its second decade, it faces emerging structural bottlenecks that require urgent attention.
The Shift: From Debtor-Controlled to Creditor-Driven
Prior to 2016, broken legal frameworks allowed defaulting business owners to use endless loopholes to stall asset recovery while the value of their machinery and factories evaporated.
The IBC introduced an absolute fear of losing operational control, sparking a massive behavioral shift among corporate borrowers:
-
Faster Repayments: According to an IIM Bangalore study, the average duration a loan account remained overdue plummeted from an alarming 248–344 days down to just 30–87 days.
-
The Deterrent Effect: The mere threat of the law has forced borrowers to settle out of court. More than 30,000 cases were resolved at the pre-admission stage, saving an estimated ₹14 lakh crore from entering formal litigation.
The Scorecard: Trillions Recovered
Data released by the Press Information Bureau up to March 2026 highlights the immense scale of this institutional transformation:
-
Hard Cash Realized: Creditors have recovered more than ₹4 lakh crore through formal resolution processes.
-
Value Preservation: For the 1,419 cases yielding successful resolution plans, recovery represents 95% of their fair value and 167% against their liquidation value.
-
Corporate Rescue: Out of 8,987 total admitted cases, 7,102 have reached closure—with 58% resulting in the successful rescue of 4,099 companies rather than their liquidation.
Fueling the Macroeconomic Engine
By purging bad loans from the banking sector, the IBC drastically improved the country’s financial health:
-
NPA Drastically Reduced: Scheduled commercial banks saw Gross Non-Performing Asset (GNPA) ratios drop to a historic low of 2.1% in September 2025, down from a peak of nearly 11.8% in 2017.
-
S&P Global Upgrade: Driven by this financial stability, S&P Global Ratings upgraded India’s insolvency framework from Group C to Group B.
-
Post-Resolution Revival: An IIM Ahmedabad study found that within five years of being rescued, resolved firms experienced an average sales surge of nearly 89% and a 106% jump in capital expenditure. Concurrently, the market valuation of these listed entities rocketed from ₹2.8 lakh crore to approximately ₹9 lakh crore.
Emerging Bottlenecks: The Recent Slump
Despite its historic success, a recent performance analysis by rating agency ICRA reveals that the IBC is navigating a challenging rough patch:
The primary driver behind this slump is severe judicial delays caused by manpower shortfalls at the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). Currently, 78% of ongoing corporate insolvency cases have exceeded the 270-day legal deadline. As litigation drags on, asset values depreciate, resulting in deeper haircuts for lenders—highlighted by a sharp 80% haircut for financial institutions in Q3 of the 2025–26 fiscal year.
The Way Forward
The history of the IBC proves it was never meant to be a static piece of legislation. To counter these operational bottlenecks, the government passed the seventh insolvency amendment bill in April 2026. While the actual on-the-ground implementation of this amendment remains critical, solving NCLT vacancies and restoring strict timelines will ultimately dictate whether the code can continue to safeguard India’s march toward economic superpower status.
