Australia In
Australia corporations are registered and regulated by the Commonwealth Government through the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission. Corporations law has been largely codified in the
Corporations Act 2001.
Brazil In
Brazil there are many different types of legal entities ('
), but the two most common ones commercially speaking are (i) ', identified by "Ltda." or "Limitada" after the company's name, equivalent to the British limited liability company, and (ii) '
or ', identified by "SA" or "Companhia" in the company's name, equivalent to the British public limited company. The "Ltda." is mainly governed by the new Civil Code, enacted in 2002, and the "SA", by Law 6.404, dated December 15, 1976, as amended.
Bosnia and Herzegovina In
Bosnia and Herzegovina, a joint-stock company is called: • '
(often abbreviated d.d. or D.D.') in both the
Bosnian language and the
Croatian language, while the
Serbian language uses: • '
(often abbreviated a.d. or A.D. - Cyrillic alphabet : акционарско друштво or а.д.'). The specified form of organization means that the company (
private or
state-owned) is organized on the
Bosnian market (Federation of BiH and RS entity level) as a legal entity that has
shares (Bosnian/Croatian:
dionica or
vrijednosni papir; Serbian:
akcija or
hartija od vrijednosti -
Cyrillic:
акција or
хартија од вриједности) that can be traded in a free market or stock exchanges in the Bosnia and Herzegovina (listed in
Sarajevo Stock Exchange or
Banja Luka Stock Exchange).
Bulgaria In
Bulgaria, a joint-stock company is called a '
or ' ( or ). When all shares are owned by a single shareholder the company receives the special designation of '
or ' ( or ).
Canada In
Canada both the federal government and the
provinces have corporate statutes, and thus a corporation may be incorporated either provincially or federally. Many older corporations in Canada stem from
Acts of Parliament passed before the introduction of general corporation law. The oldest corporation in Canada is the
Hudson's Bay Company; though its business has always been based in Canada, its
Royal Charter was issued in England by
King Charles II in 1670, and became a Canadian charter by amendment in 1970 when it moved its corporate headquarters from London to Canada. Federally recognized corporations are regulated by the
Canada Business Corporations Act.
Chile The
Chilean form of joint-stock company is called
Sociedad por Acciones (often abbreviated "SpA"). They were created in 2007 by Law N° 20.190, and they are the most recent variety of societary types, as they represent a simplified form of corporation – originally conceived for venture capital companies. According to the Ministry of Economy's Business and Society Registry, SpAs accounted for 71.42% of new businesses in October 2023.
Czech Republic and Slovakia The
Czech form of the public limited company is called '
(') and its private counterpart is called '
('). Their
Slovak equivalents are called '
(') and '
(').
German-speaking countries Germany,
Austria,
Switzerland and
Liechtenstein recognize two forms of company limited by shares: the (AG), analogous to
public limited companies (or corporations in US/Can) in the English-speaking world, and the (GmbH), similar to the modern
private limited company.
Italy Italy recognizes three types of company limited by shares: the
public limited company (
società per azioni, or S.p.A.), the
private limited company (
società a responsabilità limitata, or S.r.l.), and the publicly traded partnership (
società in accomandita per azioni, or S.a.p.a.). The latter is a hybrid of the
limited partnership and public limited company, having two categories of shareholders, some with and some without limited liability, and is rarely used in practice.
Japan In
Japan, both the state and local public entities under the
Local Autonomy Act (now
47 prefectures, made in the 19th century and
municipalities) are considered to be . Non-profit corporations may be established under the
Civil Code. The term or (企業
kigyō) is used to refer to business corporations. The predominant form is the
Kabushiki gaisha (株式会社), used by public corporations as well as smaller enterprises.
Mochibun kaisha (持分会社), a form for smaller enterprises, are becoming increasingly common. Between 2002 and 2008, the existed to bridge the gap between for-profit companies and non-governmental and non-profit organizations.
Latvia In
Latvia, which uses a model similar to Germany, a public stock company is called an
akciju sabiedrība (a/s, A/S or AS), whereas a private, 'limited liability company' is called a
sabiedrība ar ierobežotu atbildību (SIA). State-owned variants of these companies add an initial capital V (
valsts - 'state'), as in VAS and VSIA.
Netherlands Norway In Norway, a joint-stock company is called an
aksjeselskap, abbreviated
AS. A special and by far less common form of joint-stock companies, intended for companies with a large number of shareholders, is the publicly traded joint-stock companies, called
allmennaksjeselskap and abbreviated
ASA. A joint-stock company must be incorporated, has an independent legal personality and limited liability, and is required to have a certain capital upon incorporation. Ordinary joint-stock companies must have a minimum capital of NOK 30,000 upon incorporation, which was reduced from 100,000 in 2012. Publicly traded joint-stock companies must have a minimum capital of NOK 1 million.
Poland Spółka Akcyjna (
S.A.) ("Joint-stock company") in
Polish Russia Spain In
Spain there are two types of companies with limited liability: (i) "S.L.", or
Sociedad Limitada (a private
limited company), and (ii) "S.A.", or
Sociedad Anónima (similar to a
public limited company).
Ukraine The
Ukrainian form of the
private limited company is called товариство з обмеженою відповідальністю: ТОВ () or ТзОВ (), : "
partnership with limited liability". Several types of joint stock companies (, '''') exist in
Ukraine. Due to specifics of the Soviet economy, all enterprises in the Soviet republic as the rest of the
Soviet Union were state owned and private entrepreneurship was strictly prohibited and criminally prosecuted. Following the Gorbachev initiated broad spectrum reforms (
perestroika), there was introduced a term of
khozraschet and permission for organization of public economic entities called cooperatives. Following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine's economy, along with those of the rest of the former Soviet republics, was further liberalized. Along with private entrepreneurship, many state owned companies were privatized, primarily by the former party's
apparatchiks which gave a rise of another term "Red directors". Many companies started to be sold at open market and commercialized. Those companies were transformed in joint-stock companies by selling their shares for mutual cooperation and investment. As in the rest former Soviet republics (predominantly Russia) in Ukraine were created following commercial companies: • National joint-stock company, NJSC () • Open joint-stock company, OJSC () • Closed joint-stock company, CJSC () In 2009 further reforms were introduced and open joint-stock companies were forced to be restructured as public joint-stock company (, '
) or private joint-stock company (, '). Minimum amount of share capital is 1,250 minimum wages (as of 1 January 2017 ₴4,000,000 or
US$148,000). Ukraine National Securities and Stock Market Commission is the main stock market state authority.
United Kingdom Most companies are regulated by the
Companies Act 2006. The most common type of company is the private
limited company ("Limited" or "Ltd"). Private limited companies can either be limited by shares or by guarantee. Other corporate forms include the
public limited company ("plc") and the private
unlimited company. Some corporations, both public and private sector, are formed by Royal Charter or Act of Parliament. A special type of corporation is a
corporation sole, which is an office held by an individual natural person (the incumbent), but which has a continuing legal entity separate from that person.
United States Several types of conventional corporations exist in the
United States. Generically, any business entity that is recognized as distinct from the people who own it (i.e., is not a sole proprietorship or a partnership) is a corporation. This generic label includes entities that are known by such legal labels as 'association', 'organization' and 'limited liability company', as well as corporations proper. Only a company that has been formally incorporated according to the laws of a particular state is called a "corporation." A corporation was defined in the
Dartmouth College case of 1819, in which
Chief Justice Marshall of the
United States Supreme Court stated: "A corporation is an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in contemplation of the law." A corporation is a legal entity, distinct and separate from the individuals who create and operate it. As a legal entity the corporation can acquire, own, and dispose of property in its own name like buildings, land and equipment. It can also incur liabilities and enter into contracts like franchising and leasing. American corporations can be either profit-making companies or non-profit entities. Tax-exempt non-profit corporations are often called "501(c)3 corporations," after the section of the
Internal Revenue Code that addresses the tax exemption for many of them. In some states, such as Colorado, a corporation may represent itself
pro se in courts of law in some situations. The
federal government can only create corporate entities pursuant to relevant powers in the
U.S. Constitution. Thus, virtually all corporations in the U.S. are incorporated under the laws of a particular state. A major exception to the federal non-participation in the incorporation of private businesses is in
banking; under the
National Bank Act, banks may receive charters from the federal government as
national banks, subjecting them to the regulation of the federal
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency rather than state banking regulators. All states have some kind of "general corporation law" (California, Delaware, Kansas, Nevada and Ohio actually use that exact name) which authorizes the formation of private corporations
without having to obtain a charter for each one from the state legislature (as was formerly the case in the 19th century). Many states have separate, self-contained laws authorizing the formation and operation of certain specific types of corporations that are wholly independent of the state general corporation law. For example, in California, nonprofit corporations are incorporated under the Nonprofit Corporation Law, and in Illinois, insurers are incorporated under the Illinois Insurance Code. Corporations are created by filing the requisite documents with a particular state government. The process is called "incorporation", referring to the abstract concept of clothing the entity with a "veil" of artificial personhood (embodying, or "corporating" it, 'corpus' being the Latin word for 'body'). Only certain corporations, including banks, are chartered. Others simply file their articles of incorporation with the state government as part of a registration process. Once incorporated, a corporation has artificial personhood everywhere it may operate, until such time as the corporation may be dissolved. A corporation that operates in one state while being incorporated in another is a "foreign corporation". This label also applies to corporations incorporated outside of the
United States. Foreign corporations must usually register with the secretary of state's office in each state to lawfully conduct business in that state. A corporation is legally a citizen of the state (or other jurisdiction) in which it is incorporated (except when circumstances direct the corporation be classified as a citizen of the state in which it has its head office, or the state in which it does the majority of its business). Corporate business law differs dramatically from state to state. Many prospective corporations choose to incorporate in a state whose laws are most favorable to its business interests. Many large corporations are incorporated in
Delaware, for example, without being physically located there because that state has very favorable corporate tax and disclosure laws. Companies set up for
privacy or asset protection often incorporate in
Nevada, which does not require disclosure of share ownership. Many states, particularly smaller ones, have modeled their corporate statutes after the
Model Business Corporation Act, one of many model sets of law prepared and published by the
American Bar Association. As
juristic persons, corporations have certain rights that attach to natural persons. The vast majority of them attach to corporations under state law, especially the law of the state in which the company is incorporated – since the corporations very existence is predicated on the laws of that state. A few rights also attach by federal constitutional and statutory law, but they are few and far between compared to the rights of natural persons. For example, a corporation has the personal right to bring a lawsuit (as well as the capacity to be sued) and, like a natural person, a corporation can be libeled.
Harvard College, an undergraduate school of
Harvard University, formally the
President and Fellows of Harvard College (also known as the Harvard Corporation), is the oldest corporation in the western hemisphere. Founded in 1636, the second of Harvard's two governing boards was incorporated by the
Great and General Court of Massachusetts in 1650. Significantly, Massachusetts itself was a corporate colony at that time – owned and operated by the Massachusetts Bay Company (until it lost its charter in 1684) – so Harvard College is a corporation created by a corporation. Many nations have modeled their own corporate laws on American business law. Corporate law in
Saudi Arabia, for example, follows the model of New York State corporate law. In addition to typical corporations in the
United States, the federal government, in 1971 passed the
Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA), which authorized the creation of 12 regional native corporations for
Alaska Natives and over 200 village corporations that were entitled to a settlement of land and cash. In addition to the 12 regional corporations, the legislation permitted a 13th regional corporation without a land settlement for those
Alaska Natives living out of the
State of Alaska at the time of passage of
ANCSA. ==Other business entities==