Societas privata Europaea

Summary

A European Private Company (Latin: societas privata Europaea, SPE) was a legal form for a limited liability company proposed by the European Commission to be introduced across the European Union. It would have formed a company of limited liability, similar to the English limited company, the Austrian or the German GmbH, the Dutch BV, the Belgian BVBA or the French SARL. The aim of the proposal was to remove the current need for limited companies to reincorporate themselves in the corresponding legal form in all the EU member countries in which they want to trade, which represents a substantial administrative burden for small and medium enterprises.[1]

It was proposed that the SPE company form be introduced across the EU and EEA area from July 2010. The SPE was finally set to arrive in 2011 and is being slowed by the current ruling parties of Germany (CDU) to allow their own national alternative (the mini-GmbH) to grow first.[citation needed] The SPE could facilitate starting new businesses and European Integration and would thus help small businesses and entrepreneurs due to manageable capital requirements not too dissimilar to the British limited company (Ltd).

However, the European Commission withdrew the proposal in 2014 due to opposition by the European Parliament, which was concerned it might compromise worker's codetermination rights.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Company law and corporate governance - European Commission". ec.europa.eu.
  2. ^ "Company law | Fact Sheets on the European Union | European Parliament". www.europarl.europa.eu. 2023-10-31. Retrieved 2024-01-30.

External links edit

  • "Think Small First": A Small Business Act For Europe