- Industrial and Provident Society
An Industrial and Provident Society (IPS) is a legal entity for a trading business or voluntary organisation in the
United Kingdom or theRepublic of Ireland .Categories of IPS
IPSs may in general conduct any legal business except that of investment for profit.
Consumer, agricultural and housing
co-operatives ,working men's club s, Women's Institute markets, allotment societies, mutual investment companies, friendly societies andhousing association s usually incorporate as IPSs, as do somesocial enterprise s. This process is facilitated by the existence of "model rules" developed by various federal bodies, which reduce the legal costs.Credit unions andbuilding societies , which sprang from the same roots, are now governed by specific legislation.IPSs fall into two categories:
* "bona fide"co-operatives - these trade for the mutual benefit of their members, and the Registrar will judge the legality of their action by reference to co-operative principles (case law is very thin on the ground compared with that for companies);
* societies for the benefit of the community - these trade to benefit the broader community, and the Registrar will refer to charity law. Societies for the benefit of the community are granted charitable status by the taxation authority, HM Revenue and Customs, rather than theCharity Commission (inEngland and Wales ).Regulation
IPSs are regulated by the
Financial Services Authority (FSA), which took the job over from the Registrar of Friendly Societies (both being supervised by the Treasury). Note that IPS registration is quite separate from the FSA's function of regulating financial institutions.Such businesses have been controlled in the past by the Industrial and Provident Societies Partnership Act 1852 and the Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1893. The legislation in the
Republic of Ireland is based on modifications of the UK Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1893 - see [http://www.entemp.ie/commerce/companylawadmin/industrialprovident.htm the DETE website] .Nowadays in the UK they fall under
The Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1965 and subsequent legislation to the present day such as The Friendly and Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1968 (Audit Exemption) (Amendment) Order 2006 - Statutory Instrument 2006 No. 265 (which increased the audit exemption threshold level for industrial and provident societies to £5.6m).Some industrial and provident societies that exist for community benefit are charitable. Under British law they are exempt charities [Charities Act 1993, Schedule 2] and do not need to register with the regulator for charities (in
England and Wales theCharity Commission ). However, when theCharities Act 2006 comes into effect, that exemption is removed from all charitable IPSs in England and Wales.Cite web
url=http://www.ncvo-vol.org.uk/policy/index.asp?id=3928
title=A briefing on the 2006 Charities Act
publisher=NCVO ] From that point, charitable IPSs have to register with both the FSA and the Charity Commission, exceptRegistered Social Landlord s, who register with theHousing Corporation .Forms of financial capital
Unlike a
company limited by guarantee , an IPS generally has ashare capital . However, in a not-for-profit IPS the share capital may be limited to a nominal amount. Both types of IPS have a share capital, but it is usually not made up of equity shares like those in a company limited by shares, which appreciate or fall in value with the success of the enterprise that issues them. Rather they are par value shares, which can only be redeemed (if at all) at face value. The profits and losses of an IPS are thus the common property of the members. The share typically acts as a "membership ticket", and voting is on a "one member one vote" basis. The maximum individual shareholding is currently set at £20,000 (although other IPSs may hold more shares than this).It may be withdrawable share capital, an unusual form of finance which is treated as equity but may be withdrawn subject to specified conditions, and is relatively cheap for small co-operatives to raise as it is exempt from certain regulations applicable to conventional share issues regarding the publication of a prospectus. However, an IPS with withdrawable share capital is not allowed to carry on a banking business, presumably because a withdrawable share capital would make it impractical to ensure
capital adequacy requirements are continuously met.Recent UK legal developments include
The Co-operatives and Community Benefit Societies Act 2003 which introduced the concept of an asset lock which an industrial and provident society can introduce to prevent specified assets being used for unintended purposes.ee also
*
Community interest company References
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