Women in Bankruptcy1
by
Teresa Sullivan
Professor of Sociology and Vice-President and Dean of Graduate
Studies
University of Texas at Austin
and
Elizabeth Warren
Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law
Harvard University
Prepared for the American Bankruptcy Institute
Web posted and Copyright © July 13, 1999, American
Bankruptcy Institute.
A silent feminization of bankruptcy may be underway as more women
seek help from bankruptcy law to stabilize their failing economic
circumstances. The most striking finding from an initial analysis of our
newest empirical data is that the proportion of women filing alone in
bankruptcy has increased dramatically since 1981. In 1981, single filing
women were the smallest group, comprising 17% of all filers in our
sample.2 By
1991, single filing women had overtaken single filing men and were 30%
of all filers in the sample.3 By 1999, our initial analysis suggests that single
filing women have increased even more and now constitute almost 40% of
all filers.4
This makes single filing women the fastest growing group in bankruptcy
by a large margin and means that women filing alone now outnumber either
men filing alone or married couples.
Because overall bankruptcy filings have risen dramatically in the
past two decades, the increase in the proportion of filings among women
represents a particularly steep increase in their filing rates. If our
multi-district samples of consumer debtors were representative of all
debtors in bankruptcy, the increase in filings would look like this:
Projected National Filings for Single-Filing Men,
Women and Joint Petitions
|
|
1981
|
1991
|
1999
|
|
Joint
|
178,000
|
357,000
|
455,000
|
|
Men
|
81,000
|
211,000
|
386,000
|
|
Women
|
53,000
|
243,000
|
538,000
|
|
Total
|
312,000
|
811,000
|
1,379,000
|
Note: Numbers are rounded to nearest thousand
Source: Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, Consumer Bankruptcy
Project I (1981), Consumer Bankruptcy Project II (1991), and Consumer
Bankruptcy Project III (1999)
While bankruptcies for couples have grown by about 150% from 1981 to
1999, and bankruptcies by men filing alone have grown by about 375%,
bankruptcy filings for women have increased by more than nine-fold. The
"bankruptcy boom" has been widely reported. We now know, however, that
it has been fueled in large part by divorced, widowed and single women
streaming into the bankruptcy courts for help. These figures are
displayed graphically in Figure 1.

Source: Proportions of debtors by marital status taken from
Consumer Bankruptcy Project I, 1981
Consumer Bankruptcy Project II, 1991
Consumer Bankruptcy Project III, 1999
National data on non-business bankruptcy filings published by
Administrative Office of the United States Courts
In our continuing analysis, we will examine the reasons why so many
women file for bankruptcy. One obvious place to look is the effects of
divorce. Research has been accumulating for years showing that divorce
is a financial catastrophe for many women. Women typically are left with
children to support and bills to pay from the marriage. They are often
granted inadequate support payments--and sixty percent are unable to
collect what that they are awarded.5 Our study collected data
about child support and alimony, family size, and age of the debtors and
dependents, along with employment, income, and debt information. We also
have asked the debtors about the reasons for their filings, which
provides rich possibilities for better understanding the increase in
filings.
Other researchers also have identified a noticeable increase in women
heads of households filing for bankruptcy. Professors Marianne Culhane
and Michaela White have conducted a study of 1,047 Chapter 7 cases filed
in seven judicial districts in 1995. The protocols for that study are
reported fully in Marianne B. Culhane & Michaela M. White,
"Preliminary Results of the Bankruptcy Reaffirmation Project" (Oct.
1998)(unpublished manuscript on file with authors) and in Marianne B.
Culhane & Michaela M. White, "Taking the New Consumer Bankruptcy
Model for a Test Drive: Means-Testing Real Chapter 7 Debtors," 7
American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review 27 (1999). Professors
Culhane and White report that in their 1995 sample 35.8% of the debtors
were single-filing women, a figure entirely consistent with the rise we
document from 1991 to 1999.
Professor Oliver Pollak suggests that the trend extends over a long
period of time. He examined 5,441 consumer filings in a single district
(Nebraska) for 1996-97, and he found that 32.4% were by women filing
alone, again consistent with the rise during the 1990s. His protocols
and data are reported in full in Oliver B. Pollak, "Gender and
Bankruptcy: An Empirical Analysis of Evolving Trends in Chapter 7 and
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Filings 1996-1997,"Commercial Law Journal
102, 3 (1998): 333-338. By comparison, he reports that the proportion of
single-filing women was 14.6% in 1967, 11.1% in 1977, and 22.2% in 1987,
demonstrating a thirty-year growth trend among women in bankruptcy
filings.6
Together, the Pollack data and the Culhane and White data help fill in a
picture of women increasingly turning to the bankruptcy courts for
financial help.
Although not directly comparable, a Canadian study also shows a high
proportion of women filing alone. Forty-one percent of a 1997 Canadian
sample of bankrupt debtors were women. Saul Schwartz and Leigh Anderson,
An Empirical Study of Canadians Seeking Personal Bankruptcy
Protection 3 (Carleton University, 1998).
For additional commentary on women in bankruptcy, readers might
consult Zipporah Batshaw Wiseman, "Women in Bankruptcy and Beyond," 65
Indiana Law Journal 107-121 (Winter 1989); Karen Gross,
Failure and Forgiveness 67, 22, 245-246 (New Haven: Yale, 1997).
For a longer view of the role of women in the bankruptcy system, Karen
Gross, Marie Stefanini Newman, and Denise Campbell, "Ladies in Red:
Learning from America's First Female Bankrupts," 40 American Journal
of Legal History 1 (January 1996), have provided a fascinating
account. For a more contemporary view about the roles of women in the
bankruptcy system from bankruptcy to lawyer, see Commission on Gender,
Commission on Race and Ethnicity, "Report of the Third Circuit Task
Force on Equal Treatment in the Courts," 42 Villanova Law Review
1355 (1997); "Final Report and Recommendations of the Eighth Circuit
Gender Fairness Task Force," 31 Creighton L. Rev. 9 (1997); "The Effects
of Gender in the Federal Courts: The Final Report of the Ninth Circuit
Gender Bias Task Force," 67 Southern California Law Review 745
(1994).
Footnotes
1 For a paper entitled "The
Price of Equality? Women in Bankruptcy," we are examining empirical data
about who has filed for bankruptcy in 1999 and their reasons for filing
bankruptcy. ABI Executive Director Sam Gerdano asked us if we would
write a very brief summary of our initial findings. We agreed, although
we emphasize that this report is confined to only a small corner of the
newest data, and that we are continuing with the full analysis. The
comparative data from earlier years have already been published and are
referred to in this summary. [RETURN TO TEXT]
2 The data for these reports come
from three sources, a 1981 database, a 1991 database and a 1999
database. The 1981 data were collected from 1,547 bankruptcy cases filed
in ten federal districts. The protocols for that study and the data are
reported fully in full in Sullivan, Warren & Westbrook, As We
Forgive Our Debtors: Bankruptcy and Consumer Credit in America
(Oxford University Press 1989), 149. As we report there, the proportion
of single women filers in 1981 was 17%. [RETURN TO
TEXT]
3 The 1991 data were collected from
2,650 cases filed in sixteen federal judicial districts. The protocols
for that study and the data are reported fully in full in Sullivan,
Warren & Westbrook, The Fragile Middle Class: Americans in
Debt (Yale University Press 1999). The proportion of single filing
women in that sample is 30%. (This book will be available in the fall
from Yale University Press, but the chapter on research protocols is
available on request from the authors.) Data from this study and
protocols on the study have already been published in Teresa Sullivan,
Elizabeth Warren and Jay Lawrence Westbrook, "From Golden Years to
Bankruptcy Years, Norton Bankruptcy Law Advisor 1 (July 1998) (a
report on the growth in bankruptcy filings among older Americans). [RETURN TO TEXT]
4 In addition to the two published
studies, the two of us have developed a data base of consumer filings in
1999. The 1999 data were collected from 1,521 bankruptcy cases in the
bankruptcy courts during the first quarter of 1999. The districts are
the Northern District of California, the Northern District of Illinois,
the Eastern District of Kentucky, the Southern District of Ohio, the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania,the Middle District of Tennessee, the
Northern District of Texas, and the Western District of Wisconsin. The
cases are all in consumer cases filed initially in Chapter 7 or Chapter
13. The data were collected from questionnaires distributed during the
statutorily required meeting between the debtors, the trustees and the
creditors (the so-called 341 meetings, named after the statutory
provision that mandates them) during late January, February, and March
of 1999. Funding was provided by the Harvard Law School.[RETURN TO TEXT]
5 A report of the United States
Office of Child Support Enforcement, Twentieth Annual Report to
Congress for the Period Ending September 30, 1995, at 1 (1997)
explains that only 35% of 11.5 million custodial parents actually
receive any child support payments--even a single payment. Either
they did not receive a support order or they had an order but did not
receive any payments. According to the report, less than half of all
custodial parents of minor children (46%) had support orders and were
supposed to receive child support payments. Of those parents, only 51%
received full payment, 24% received partial payment, and 25% got
nothing. [RETURN TO TEXT]
6 Because there were no joint
petitions before 1979, the earlier data must be interpreted with great
caution. Women who filed alone before 1978 may or may not have been
filing alone in fact. In their study of bankrupt debtors whose cases
closed in 1964, pioneer researchers David T. Stanley and Marjorie Girth
found that 76% of the debtors they interviewed were married. David T.
Stanley and Marjorie Girth, Bankruptcy: Problem, Process, Reform
(Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1971), 42. If both husband and
wife filed petitions, the proportion of women "single-filers" would not
be comparable to the number today when married couples can file a joint
petition for a single filing fee. [RETURN TO
TEXT]