- Statutory corporation
A Statutory Corporation is a corporation created by
statute . Their precise nature varies by jurisdiction thus they might be ordinary companies/corporations owned by a government with or without other shareholders, or they might be a body without shareholders which is controlled by national or sub-national government to the (in some cases minimal) extent provided for in the creating legislation.Bodies described in the English language as "statutory corporations" exist in the following countries in accordance with the associated descriptions (where provided) :-
Australia
In Australia, statutory corporations are created by either state or national parliaments, and are created by statute. Current statutory corporations include
Australia Post ,Airservices Australia , theAustralian Rail Track Corporation and theAustralian Egg Corporation . The purpose of their separation from normal government operations is to ensure profitability, and in theory, independence of decision making from the state or national government (to ensure that decisions are made on a commercial basis with less or no political interference.)As statutory corporations, their regulatory and business conditions may be significantly different from private-sector companies. An example of this in Australia is the regulatory conditions placed on the national communications company
Telstra .A significant number of the statutory corporations are private commercial operations, a number of which have been privatised, in part or in whole, since the 1980s: these have included the national airline
Qantas ,Telstra (also previously known as Telecom Australia), and theCommonwealth Bank of Australia .Germany
An example of a Statutory Corporation is a " [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kassen%C3%A4rztliche_Vereinigung Kassenärztliche Vereinigung] ", a body involved in the provision of out-patient medical services in a German state.
India
Statutory corporation are public enterprises into existence by a Special Act of the Parliament. The Act defines its powers and functions, rules and regulations governing its employees and its relationship with government departments.
This is a corporate body created by the legislature with defined powers and functions and is financially independent with a clear control over a specified area or a particular type of commercial activity. It is a corporate person and has the capacity of acting in its own name. Statutory corporations therefore have the power of the government and considerable amount of operating flexibility of private enterprises.
Ireland
In the
Republic of Ireland , a statutory corporation is a body corporate, which is created under a particularAct of the Oireachtas , which is expected to operate as if it were a commercial company (with or without asubsidy from the Exchequer, depending on whether or not it would make a profit without one). Such bodies do not haveshareholders , but are typically boards appointed by a sponsor minister. The provisions of the Companies' Acts do not typically directly apply to such bodies, although their founding legislation may specify similar requirements. As they are not formally companies they do not make aprofit orloss , but rather asurplus ordeficit .The statutory corporation format was usually the form most
state-sponsored bodies of the Republic of Ireland took until recent years, however usual policy today is that aprivate limited company by shares orpublic limited company incorporated under the Companies' Acts is set up instead, with the relevant Minister holding 100% of the issued share capital. Nonethelessas of 2007 several promient statutory corporations continue to exist, such asRadio Telefís Éireann , theElectricity Supply Board , andBord Gáis Éireann United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, a Statutory Corporation is a corporate body created by statute. It typically has no shareholders and its powers are defined by the Act of Parliament which creates it, and may be modified by later legislation. Such bodies were often created to provide public services, examples including
British Railways , theNational Coal Board and the Post Office Corporation. Other examples include thecounty council s, theNational Assembly for Wales [Government of Wales Act 1998, Section 1] and theOlympic Delivery Authority . [London Olympic Games and Paralympic Games Act 2006 ] The phrase is not used to describe a company which operates as a conventional shareholder-owned company registered under the Companies Acts.United States
At the state level,
municipal corporation s andcounties are often created by legislative acts. Some organizations such as atransit district s or special purpose corporations such as auniversity , are also created by statute. In some states, a city or country can be created by petition of a certain number or percentage of voters or landholders of the affected area, which then causes a municipal corporation to be chartered as a result of compliance with the appropriate law. Corporations to be established for most other purposes are usually just incorporated as any othernon-profit corporation , by filing the paperwork with the appropriate agency as part of the formation of the entity.At the Federal level, a small number of corporations are created by Congress. Prior to the District of Columbia being granted the ability to issue corporate charters in the late 1800s, corporations operating in the District required a
congressional charter . With limited exceptions, most corporations created by Congress are not federally chartered, but are simply created as District of Columbia corporations as a result of the enabling law.Fact|date=June 2007There are a number of federally chartered corporations that still exist, some relatively famous ones include the
Boy Scouts of America , each of theFederal Reserve Bank s, and theFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation . The basic advantage for being federally chartered is that no other corporation anywhere in the United States is allowed to have the same name.References
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