An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005
The financial sector in general is a difficult industry to regulate, as there is a need to balance the competing interests of the various stakeholders. Tampering with the cornerstone of the capitalist system naturally arouses diverging views and is often the subject of many debates as is evidenced b...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-151932020-10-06T05:11:08Z An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 Mwape, Bibiana Mwansa Hutchison, Andrew Commercial Law The financial sector in general is a difficult industry to regulate, as there is a need to balance the competing interests of the various stakeholders. Tampering with the cornerstone of the capitalist system naturally arouses diverging views and is often the subject of many debates as is evidenced by the debates surrounding the National Credit Act ('NCA'). Nonetheless, its regulation can be a weapon to fight against poverty and inequality as evidenced by the purposes of the NCA. The object of this research is to analyse the law on debt review, focusing on the credit provider's right contained in s 86(10) of the NCA to terminate the debt review process. 2015-11-21T09:38:04Z 2015-11-21T09:38:04Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15193 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Law Department of Commercial Law |
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language |
English |
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Dissertation |
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Commercial Law |
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Commercial Law Mwape, Bibiana Mwansa An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 |
description |
The financial sector in general is a difficult industry to regulate, as there is a need to balance the competing interests of the various stakeholders. Tampering with the cornerstone of the capitalist system naturally arouses diverging views and is often the subject of many debates as is evidenced by the debates surrounding the National Credit Act ('NCA'). Nonetheless, its regulation can be a weapon to fight against poverty and inequality as evidenced by the purposes of the NCA. The object of this research is to analyse the law on debt review, focusing on the credit provider's right contained in s 86(10) of the NCA to terminate the debt review process. |
author2 |
Hutchison, Andrew |
author_facet |
Hutchison, Andrew Mwape, Bibiana Mwansa |
author |
Mwape, Bibiana Mwansa |
author_sort |
Mwape, Bibiana Mwansa |
title |
An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 |
title_short |
An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 |
title_full |
An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 |
title_fullStr |
An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 |
title_full_unstemmed |
An analysis of section 86(10) of the National Credit Act no. 32 of 2005 |
title_sort |
analysis of section 86(10) of the national credit act no. 32 of 2005 |
publisher |
University of Cape Town |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15193 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mwapebibianamwansa ananalysisofsection8610ofthenationalcreditactno32of2005 AT mwapebibianamwansa analysisofsection8610ofthenationalcreditactno32of2005 |
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