
Liabilities reorganization is the concession items made by a creditor in accordance with the agreement made with a debtor in financial difficulty or rules of the court. There are four major forms of liabilities reorganization:
1. Using assets to pay off
The debtor transfers his ownership of assets such as cash, inventory, short term investments, fixed assets, long term investments and intangible assets to the creditor to pay off its liabilities.
2. Transforming liabilities into capital
The liabilities of an enterprise are transformed into owner's equity. Such reorganization process shall follow the principle of capital preservation and go through necessary legal procedures.
3. Modification of other liability conditions
The liability conditions excluding the above two are modified, for example, reducing the principal of liabilities or the interest of liabilities.
4. Mixed reorganization
For mixed reorganization, the above stated forms of reorganization are combined. For example, part of the liabilities is paid off through assets and other parts are transformed into capital, or a part of a specific liability is transformed into capital and the other part is reorganized by modifying other liability conditions.
Accounting for different forms of liabilities reorganization forms varies from each other. Even under the same reorganization, accounting for the debtor differs from that for the creditor. The valuation of the profits generated and the losses arising in the process of reorganization and the accounting for contingent expenditures or contingent incomes are the key issues in liabilities reorganization.
1 Accounting for the debtor
When assets are used to pay off liabilities, debit accounts payable and credit assets accounts. The difference between the book value of the liabilities and the fair value of the assets is accounted as gains of liabilities reorganization and is posted to the profit & Loss account of the current period. When liabilities are being transformed into capital, off-set book value of liabilities and debit accrual accounts. The amount of shareholder's equity gained by creditors after giving up their credit is recognized as capital received and is credited as capital received. The difference between the fair value of shareholder's equity and the capital received constitutes capital reserve, therefore credit capital reserve. The difference between the book value of liabilities reorganized and the fair value of shareholder's equity is the gains from liabilities reorganization and posted to profit & Loss account of the current period. If the liabilities are reorganized by modifying other liability conditions, the debtor reduces the book value of the reorganized liabilities to the amount payable in the future. The reduced amount is gains from liabilities reorganization and posted to profit & loss account of the current period. If the modified cause for liabilities involves contingent expenditures, the contingent expenditure should be included in future accounts payable and thereafter gains from liabilities reorganization should be determined.
2 Accounting for the Creditor
When the debtor pays off his liabilities by assets, he debits the asset account to be sold to off-set the accounts receivable and provisions for bad debts of the credit. The difference between the net value of the reorganized credit (book balance less provision for bad debts) and the fair value of the assets to be sold is posted to profit & loss account of the current period as losses of the liabilities reorganization. When the creditor is transformed into capital, the fair value of the shareholder's equity is recognized as long term investment, the accounting process of which is the same as the above case. When modifying other liability conditions to make the liability reorganization, the book balance value of the creditor is reduced to the accounts of future receivables with the amount reduced recognized as losses of reorganization. If any of the modified causes for liabilities involves contingent incomes, the contingent income is not included in future receivables. It is recognized and accounted as profits and losses of the current period only when it takes place.