European organisational law explained

European organisational law is a part of European Union law, which concerns the formation, operation and insolvency of public bodies, partnerships, corporations and foundations in the entire European Union. There is no substantive European company law as such, although a host of minimum standards are applicable to companies throughout the European Union. All member states continue to operate separate companies acts, which are amended from time to time to comply with EU Directives and Regulations. There is, however, also the option of businesses to incorporate as a Societas Europaea (SE), which allows a company to operate across all member states.

History

See main article: History of company law and History of the European Union. There have been, since the European Community was founded in 1957, a series of directives creating minimum standards for business across the European Union. A central aim restated in each Directive is to reduce the barriers to freedom of establishment of businesses in the European Union through a process of harmonising the basic laws. The object is that when laws are harmonised, business will not be deterred by different or more onerous laws, but at the same time harmonisation provides a basic level of protection for investors in each member state, none of which are forced into regulatory competition.

Types

Existing

Except for the EEIG which is an unlimited partnership, all of the following types have full EU/EEA-wide juridical personality.

Name (in Latin)Abbrev.English translationEstablished as a legal formNumber of registrations[1] (2014)Comment
N/A EEIG 1985 several thousand e.g. ARTE
Societas Europaea SE European company 2004 2423
Societas cooperativa Europaea SCE European cooperative society 2006
N/A EGTC 2006 78
N/A ERIC 2009 22
N/A Europarty 2014 10 defined already in 2003, but a legal form in its own right only since 2014
N/A Eurofoundation 2014 9 defined already in 2007, but a legal form in its own right only since 2014

Proposed

Name (in Latin)Abbrev.English translationComment
Societas privata Europaea SPE European private company proposal withdrawn,
foreseen alternative: SUP
Societas unius personae SUP Sole proprietorship
Fundatio Europaea FE European foundation
N/A ME
Associatio Europaea AE European association

European treaties

See main article: Regulatory competition.

Harmonised fields of national law

See main article: Harmonisation of law and Subsidiarity.

Formations and civil law

Corporate governance

Capital maintenance

Mergers and acquisitions

Accounting and audit

Market regulation

See also

References

Books
Articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://ecdb.worker-participation.eu/show_factsheets.php?letter=A&status_id=3&title=Established%20SEs Societas Europaea registrations