By Surbhi Kapur (Jindal Global Law School)
Issues
While insolvency is an unfortunate outcome for any enterprise, its magnitude worsens when it plagues a hospital and, more generally, the healthcare sector, affecting a wide range of stakeholders. In my recent Working Paper, I examine the incidence of hospital sector insolvency through the lens of the Indian experience undertaking a first enquiry into this hitherto unmapped terrain. Similar to other enterprises and listed entities (limited liability companies) [1], hospitals may obtain financing [2] for sustaining their operations and utilise the stock and credit markets for this [3] purpose. A huge capital expenditure is required for setting up and running a hospital. The physical infrastructure, professional capability, and upgradation of capacity call for continuous infusion of funds for a considerable period of time. Most of the hospitals around the world owe it to their shareholders to maximise their profit whilst carrying leverage and often relying on debt for their sustenance. In fact, today, several major hospital chains, in India and abroad, run on significant private equity backing [4]. Hospital insolvency is structurally distinctive in ways that diffuses significant implications for legal design. These entities operate on low profit margins [5], leading up to carrying considerable default risk and, in that process, becoming highly vulnerable to insolvency. Their cost structures are defined by high fixed expenditure on personnel, equipment, and infrastructure, while their revenue streams are tied to reimbursement regimes that adjust slowly and, in many systems, are subject to chronic delay. The result is a persistent mismatch between cost incurrence and revenue realisation, generating acute liquidity risk. At the same time, the assets that underpin a hospital’s value viz., clinical staff, patient trust, specialist accreditations, referral networks, etc. are largely intangible and highly time-sensitive. They dissipate rapidly once a facility enters distress. Unlike a factory which may remain idle while retaining much of its underlying value; a hospital that ceases operations experiences an almost immediate erosion of its core assets. For this reason, when a hospital closes or veers in the zone of insolvency, the ramifications can have a far more detrimental impact on society and for the economy as a whole. The non-fiscal impact (particularly the ‘social’ impact) of hospital financial distress and the vitality of insolvency resolution laws, in this milieu, becomes significant: making financial distress of a hospital a “social” issue.
Most corporate insolvency law regimes apply uniformly to all ‘corporate persons’ without sectoral differentiation. While such statutory neutrality is coherent in the context of ordinary commercial enterprises, it produces a structural mismatch when extended to essential service providers like hospitals. A hospital in insolvency is not merely a corporate debtor; it also functions as a care provider, an employer of regulated professionals, a custodian of sensitive patient data, and a critical node within a regional health system. Standard insolvency mechanisms, viz., the moratorium, mandate of the resolution professional (RP), the creditor voting process, and the liquidation waterfall are improvised to produce outcomes that are necessarily ad hoc and often uneven.
Where the statutory scheme exhibits lacunae, the judicial rendition endeavours to partially fill the gap, and it is here that the Indian experience offers instructive lessons for the international community. The Indian insolvency courts, being the Adjudicating Authority (AA) under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016 (National Company Law Tribunal- NCLT), the appellate authority (National Company Law Appellate Tribunal- NCLAT), and the Supreme Court of India (SC), have adopted a welfare-aware reading of the general insolvency law in cases where hospitals as “corporate persons” are involved. The judiciary has emphasised the imperative of preserving hospitals as a ‘going concern’, in both operational and functional ways, throughout the corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP). The interpretive sensitivity reflects a thinking on deeper socio-economic constitutionalism and its values. There’s an implicit recognition that a closure due to insolvency will not merely be a private creditor-debtor question. It has a systemic social impact and is not purely contractual. The judicial rendition further establishes that while insolvency is a part of economic governance, the law should function as an instrument of socio- economic reorganisation. A purely creditor-centric reading of the law would favour a swift liquidation. A purely social reading would displace creditor rights indefinitely. The Courts, instead, adopt a calibrated approach integrating market efficiency with public welfare. The principle of going concern serves as the doctrinal vehicle through which this balance is realised.
India’s decade of hospital insolvency cases (2016–2026) reflects a mixed landscape. On the positive side, the IBC has worked as a “lifeline” [6] for the sector: resolutions outnumber liquidations at roughly a 2:1 ratio, and hospital assets command premium valuations [7] - an enterprise value of more than 25 times EBITDA on an average. But the failures are equally instructive. Proceedings routinely far exceed the statutorily stipulated timelines, driven by AA capacity constraints [8] and the complexity of healthcare assets: hospitals average 1,200–2,000 days [9] in proceedings. For hospitals, this delay is not merely procedural - it is value erosion and destruction, as clinical staff leave, patient volumes fall, and accreditations lapse. Trade creditors comprising the pharmaceutical suppliers, diagnostic equipment lessors, etc. consistently absorb severe haircuts, even though their financial health directly sustains the hospital ecosystem that the CIRP is meant to preserve.
Unlike the existing body of scholarship on the IBC, which predominantly addresses sectors such as aviation, electricity, climate change, telecom, and real estate, the issue of hospital (sector) insolvency remains entirely unexplored within the Indian legal literature. There is a marked dearth of studies, whether in academic journals, newspaper articles, blogs, or other published sources that engage with IBC, with the sole exception of one notable contribution which observes that IBC has functioned as a “lifeline” for the sector. On this ground and in filling a critical gap in the literature, this research examines the interplay between patient rights, creditor interests, and statutory safeguards in the context of hospital insolvency resolution in India.
Conclusion
A judge of the SC recently observed “IBC is a specialist hospital for distressed companies.” [10]. A slight word-play that follows is more significant: IBC is also a specialist for distressed hospital companies. Hospitals present a unique challenge as “living institutions” under general insolvency frameworks, where distress affects human lives, not just machinery. The deeper question raised by hospital insolvency is one concerning institutional design: whether a framework built around commercial efficiency can simultaneously serve as a mechanism for social stabilisation. The evidence from India suggests that it can: partially. Courts can adapt general principles to account for the distinctive character of hospital debtors, and creditor-driven processes may, at times, yield going concern outcomes that advance both public and private interests. Yet judicial ingenuity is no substitute for legislative design. As private capital continues to deepen its presence [11] in healthcare systems worldwide, the interface between corporate insolvency law and hospital distress will become an increasingly urgent site of reform. The emerging imperative is clear: corporate insolvency law must continue its evolution as a mechanism of socio-economic stabilisation, displacing its narrow orientation which rested on debt realisation and creditor bargaining.
*The article was originally published on The ECGI Blog.
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK616123/
[2] https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w28709/revisions/w28709.rev0.pdf
[3] https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/aer.20221705
[4] https://www.outlookbusiness.com/corporate/asg-eye-hospital-plans-ipo-next-year-to-expand-by-57-centres-annually
[5] https://www.healthcareexecutive.in/blog/are-indian-hospitals-profitable
[6]https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/ibc-turns-lifeline-for-hospitals-investors-snap-up-distressed-healthcare-firms/articleshow/116838573.cms?from=mdr
[7]https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/ibc-turns-lifeline-for-hospitals-investors-snap-up-distressed-healthcare-firms/printarticle/116838573.cms
[8]https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/company/corporate-trends/with-mounting-pendency-infra-woes-nclt-struggles-as-insolvency-cases-surge-beyond-capacity/articleshow/126267043.cms
[9] https://bfsi.economictimes.indiatimes.com/articles/ibc-recovery-rate-remains-at-32-amid-rising-resolution-delays/125624400
[10] https://www.barandbench.com/news/ibc-is-a-specialist-hospital-for-distressed-companies-supreme-court-justice-n-kotiswar-singh
[11] https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.20221705