Secured Transactions Law Reform in Asia and Access to Finance: What can the UNCITRAL Model Law on Secured Transactions Offer?

Author(s):  
N Orkun Akseli
2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 545-575
Author(s):  
Roderick J Wood

Abstract The enactment of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code in the USA has had a profound influence on the reform of secured transactions law in other countries. The operational principles that animate Article 9 were first transplanted into Canada and later into New Zealand. In the last two decades, at least 25 countries have passed personal property security legislation (PPSA) based on these principles. On one level, one could claim that Article 9 has been transplanted into each of these 25 countries. However, on another level this story is far too simplistic. If one examines the various statutes, it becomes clear that a more complex process has been at work in which there has been innovation as well as borrowing. These innovations, in turn, influence the borrowings of other countries that enact a PPSA. In this highly dynamic environment the source of borrowing can be difficult to identify. This article examines the nature and extent of the borrowings that occur in connection with the reform of secured transactions in countries that have enacted a PPSA. It will identify three major templates that are available—namely, the most recent version of Article 9, the Canadian/New Zealand model, and the UNCITRAL Model Law. These templates will be reviewed in order to find markers that are present only in that template and not in the other two. These markers will be used to ‘fingerprint’ the PPSA legislation in other countries in order to measure the extent to which the jurisdiction has borrowed from each of the three templates. The article will conclude with a number of observations about the path of secured transactions law reform on an international level.


2007 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 567-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald C. Clarke

AbstractSince the early 1990s, China has come a long way in legislating the foundational rules for its reformed economy. Virtually all of the important areas – contracts, business organizations, securities, bankruptcy and secured transactions, to name a few – are now covered by national legislation as well as lower-level regulations. Yet an important feature of a legal structure suited to a market economy is missing: the ability of the system to generate from below solutions to problems not adequately dealt with by existing legislation. The top-down model that has dominated Chinese law reform efforts to date can only do so much. What is needed now is a more welcoming attitude to market-generated solutions to the gaps and other problems that will invariably exist in legislation. The state's distrust of civil-society institutions and other bottom-up initiatives suggests, however, that this different approach will not come easily.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 642-662
Author(s):  
Louise Gullifer ◽  
Ignacio Tirado

Author(s):  
Michel Marlize Koekemoer ◽  
Reghard Brits

This article analyses the South African legal framework governing security rights in movable property with the view to inspire law reform. The analysis is based on a comparison of the current South African framework with the UNCITRAL Legislative Guide on Secured Transactions, a soft-law instrument containing international best practice. The problematic aspects of the South African framework benchmarked against the UNCITRAL Guide are: (1) not having a common legal framework that equally applies to all types of (including quasi-) real security transactions; (2) the scope of the current framework not being comprehensive (inclusive) enough; (3) not having an efficient enough method of creating the security right; (4) the current publicity method, particularly concerning special notarial bonds, being overly cumbersome and not providing effective public notice to third parties; and (5) the current enforcement measures potentially not being the most efficient. Regarding each of these problem areas, the article makes proposals on how the South African legislature could reform the current framework into one that is legally efficient and in step with international best practice.


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