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STRICTLY EMBARGOED UNTIL 9.30 AM, 5 August
2005 |
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Reference P/2005/253 5 August 2005 |
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STATISTICS RELEASE: INSOLVENCIES IN THE SECOND
QUARTER 2005
Statistics showing insolvencies in the second quarter
2005 are published today (5 August) by the Department of Trade and
Industry.
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COMPANY LIQUIDATIONS
There were
3,342 liquidations in England and Wales in the second quarter
of 2005 on a seasonally adjusted basis. This was an increase
of 12.5% on the previous quarter and an increase of 6% on the
same period a year ago.
This was made up of 1,286
compulsory liquidations, an increase of 14.6% on the previous
quarter and an increase of 11.6% on the corresponding quarter
of last year, and 2,056 creditors voluntary liquidations, an
increase of 11.2% on the previous quarter and an increase of
2.8% on the corresponding quarter of last year.
0.7% of
active companies went into liquidation in the twelve months
ended Q2 2005, the same as the previous quarter and a decrease
on the corresponding quarter of 2004.
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INDIVIDUAL INSOLVENCIES
There were 15,394
individual insolvencies in England and Wales in the second
quarter of 2005 on a seasonally adjusted basis. This was an
increase of 11.7% on the previous quarter and an increase of
36.8% on the same period a year ago.
This was made up
of 11,195 bankruptcies, an increase of 7.8% on the previous
quarter and 27.5% on the corresponding quarter of last year,
and 4,199 Individual Voluntary Arrangements (IVA’s), an
increase of 23.7% on the previous quarter and an increase of
69.6% on the corresponding quarter of the previous year.
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| Number
of Insolvencies in England and Wales (seasonally
adjusted) |
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Percentage change |
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2004 |
2004 |
2004 |
2005 |
2005 |
Q2
2005 on: |
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Q2 |
Q3 |
Q4 |
Q1r |
Q2p |
Q1 2005 |
Q2 2004 |
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| Company
Liquidations |
3,154 |
2,969 |
2,938 |
2,972 |
3,342 |
12.5 |
6.0 |
| of which: |
Compulsory |
1,153 |
1,128 |
1,131 |
1,122 |
1,286 |
14.6 |
11.6 |
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Creditors Voluntary
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2,001 |
1,841 |
1,807 |
1,850 |
2,056 |
11.2 |
2.8 |
| Individuals |
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11,255 |
12,032 |
13,020 |
13,781 |
15,394 |
11.7 |
36.8 |
| of which: |
Bankruptcies |
8,779 |
9,202 |
9,814 |
10,386 |
11,195 |
7.8 |
27.5 |
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IVA's |
2,476 |
2,830 |
3,206 |
3,395 |
4,199 |
23.7 |
69.6 |
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p
= provisional, r = revised |
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View
or download the tables
1. The Official Insolvency Statistics are the most
comprehensive record of the number of insolvencies and bankruptcies
and provide a more accurate picture for analysing business
conditions. The figures include businesses and individuals, with a
breakdown by type of insolvency procedure. The figures treat
Scotland separately (as insolvencies are defined differently in
Scotland) and give an industrial analysis (for which the figures for
England & Wales are published one quarter in arrears).
2.
The statistics are derived from administrative records of the DTI
Insolvency Service and Companies House Executive Agencies. The
figures for company liquidations are made up of compulsory
liquidations (winding-up orders made by the courts) and creditors'
voluntary liquidations registered at Companies House. Figures for
individual insolvencies comprise bankruptcy orders and individual
voluntary arrangements under the Insolvency Act 1986 and deeds of
arrangement under the Deeds of Arrangement Act 1914. Individual
voluntary arrangements and deeds of arrangement are now included
under one column.
3. Numbers of insolvencies are not directly
comparable with numbers of new business formations. Statistics of
business start-ups and closures that are directly comparable with
each other have been assembled from VAT records and are published by
the Department of Trade and Industry. The latest figures are those
for 2003, and were issued in a DTI press notice on 3 November 2004.
More detailed figures are available via the on-line database NOMIS.
Additionally, analysis into the number of firms in the United
Kingdom estimated the total number of businesses at the start of
2003 at 4 million.
4. The X11ARIMA program (developed by
Statistics Canada) is used for the seasonal adjustment of the
insolvency statistics, this being the recommended program within UK
National Statistics.
5. A company or individual with debts
that they are unable to pay as they fall due is said to be
insolvent.
6. Insolvent companies are dealt with under
the Insolvency Act of 1986. They can either be the subject of
a compulsory liquidation (winding-up) order obtained from the
Court by a creditor, member or director or themselves pass a
resolution, subject to the approval of a creditors' meeting that the
company be wound up voluntarily (creditors voluntary
liquidations). In either case they are said to have been
wound-up, and numbers are given in Tables 1 and 6. A third
type of winding-up, members' voluntary liquidation, is not included
because it does not involve insolvency.
7. The Insolvency Act
1986 also introduced the procedures of company administration
orders and company voluntary arrangements. The
administration procedure gives a period of time during which
creditors are restrained from taking action and a court appointed
administrator puts forward proposals to deal with the company’s
financial difficulties. The Company Voluntary Arrangement procedure
aids business by enabling a company in financial difficulty to come
to a binding agreement with its creditors. These are listed
separately in Table 3.
8. The Enterprise Act 2002 introduced
revisions to the corporate administration procedures, replacing Part
II of the Insolvency Act 1986 with Schedule B1. These include the
introduction of additional entry routes into administration that do
not require the making of an administration order and a streamlined
process for Administrations whereby a company can in some
circumstances be dissolved without recourse to liquidation. The
primary objective of administration (and of Company Voluntary
Arrangements) is the rescue of the company as a going concern; where
liquidation does result these cases will be recorded under the
insolvency figures at Table 1. These provisions came into force on
15th September 2003 and Administrations under the Enterprise
Act have been included on Table 3 from Q3 2003 (dissolution
follows 3 months after a notice is filed with the Registrar of
Companies, if no objections are raised by the court).
9.
Receivership appointments comprise administrative
receivers appointed under the 1986 Act and certain other
receivership appointments, for example under the Law of Property Act
1925. Due to the use of the same statutory documentation for
different types of receivership, it is not possible to give a
breakdown between them. The provisions of the Enterprise Act 2002
(section 250) have made some changes to the procedures for
administrative receivership from 15 September 2003.
10. For
individuals the term bankrupt is used to indicate
insolvency.
11. Insolvent individuals in England and Wales
are dealt with mainly under the Insolvency Act 1986. A bankruptcy
order is made on the petition of the debtor or one of his
creditors when the Court is satisfied that there is no prospect of
the debt being paid. (Figures for bankruptcy orders include
administration orders, which are bankruptcy orders relating
to the estate of a deceased debtor). On 1 April 2004 there was an
increase in the amount of the petition deposit required before a
bankruptcy order can be made. There was a significant rise in the
number of bankruptcy orders made in the last two weeks before the
increase in petition deposits became effective. There are also
individual voluntary arrangements and deeds of
arrangement, which enable debtors to come to an agreement with
their creditors. Table 2 summarises all of the above types of
individual insolvencies.
12. Insolvent individuals in
Scotland are subject to sequestration under the Bankruptcy
(Scotland) Act 1985. (There are no deeds of arrangement or
individual voluntary arrangements in Scotland). The Bankruptcy
(Scotland) Act 1993 amending the 1985 Act came into force on 1 April
1993 and will have affected the number of sequestrations in the
Scottish Courts.
13. Under the Insolvency Act 1986 and the
Insolvent Partnerships Order, insolvent partnerships may be wound up
like an unregistered company or administered following bankruptcy
orders against the partners. Insolvent Partnerships can also enter
administration or a voluntary arrangement.
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National
Statistics
National Statistics are produced to high
professional standards set out in the National Statistics Code
of Practice. They undergo regular quality assurance reviews to
ensure that they meet customer needs. They are produced free
from any political interference.
You can find a range
of National Statistics on the Internet – http://www.statistics.gov.uk/
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Press Enquiries:
Lorna Dennis Insolvency Service Press
Officer Public Enquiries Textphone (for
those with hearing impairment)
Press Office
Fax |
+44 (0)207 637
6279
+44 (0)20 7215 5000 +44 (0)20 7215
6740
+44 (0)20 7222 4382
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Non Media
Enquiries Statistics and Analysis
Directorate: Margaret Sims Gary Mills
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+44 (0)20
7215 3305 +44 (0)20 7215 3286
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E-MAIL: margaret.sims@dti.gsi.gov.uk gary.mills@dti.gsi.gov.uk
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INTERNET: http://www.dtistats.net/sd/ |
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Tables
- Company
Liquidations in England and Wales
- Individual
Insolvencies in England and Wales
- Administrations,
company voluntary arrangements and receiverships in England and
Wales registered at Companies House (not seasonally adjusted)
- Company
Liquidations in England and Wales - Industrial analysis
- Bankruptcies
in England and Wales - Industrial analysis
- Insolvencies
in Scotland (not seasonally adjusted)
- Company
Liquidations in Scotland - Industrial analysis
- Annual
rate of company Liquidations (for latest 12 months) - Company
Liquidations in England and Wales as a percentage of the number of
companies registered
Download all
tables in Excel (262Kb) Download the press notice (no
tables) as a
PDF file (124Kb) Download the press notice with tables as
a PDF file (165Kb) Download the press notice tables only as
a PDF file (44Kb)
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