Benefit corporation
Encyclopedia
A Benefit Corporation, is a class of corporation
Corporation
A corporation is created under the laws of a state as a separate legal entity that has privileges and liabilities that are distinct from those of its members. There are many different forms of corporations, most of which are used to conduct business. Early corporations were established by charter...

 required by law to create general benefit for society as well as for shareholders. Benefit Corporations must create a material positive impact on society, and consider how their decisions affect their employees, community, and the environment. Moreover, they must publicly report on their social and environmental performances using established third-party standards.
See also: Public-benefit corporation

History

The chartering of Benefit Corporations is an attempt to reclaim the original purpose for which corporations were chartered in early America. Then, states chartered corporations to acheive a specific public purpose, such as building bridges or roads. Their legitimacy stemmed from their delegated charter, although they could still earn profits while fulfilling it.

Over time, however, corporations came to be chartered without any public purpose, while being legally bound to the singular purpose of profit-maximization for its shareholders. Advocates of Benefit Corporations assert that this singular focus has resulted in a variety of societal ills, including the thwarting of democracy, diminished social good, and negative environmental impacts.

In April 2010, Maryland became the first U.S. state to pass Benefit Corporation legislation. Hawaii, Virginia, California, Vermont, and New Jersey soon followed. Additionally, as of November 2011, Benefit Corporation legislation had been introduced or partially passed in Colorado, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.

Benefit corporations and corporations contrasted in law

By law, the mission of a corporation is to maximize profit for shareholders, and the totality of a corporation's activites must serve that single end. Should a corporation fail to conduct themselves in that manner—fail to fulfill what is called its "fiduciary duty"—they may be held legally liable and face civil penalties.

By contrast, Benefit Corporations must legally account for a variety of considerations as it pursues its mission. Fiduciary duty for benefit corporations must include non-financial interests, such as social benefit, employee and supplier concerns, and environmental impact. Whether it does such is regulated by third-party certification. A benefit corporation resembles a C corporation
C corporation
C corporation refers to any corporation that, under United States income tax law, is taxed separately from its owners. It is distinguished from an S corporation, which is not taxed separately. Most major companies are treated as C corporations for U.S. income tax purposes.-C corporation vs...

 or a LLC
Limited liability company
A limited liability company is a flexible form of enterprise that blends elements of partnership and corporate structures. It is a legal form of company that provides limited liability to its owners in the vast majority of United States jurisdictions...

, except for the distinguishing differences inherent in its chartering and agreement to be held accountable to the bounds of its charter by its third-party certifier.

Provisions

Typical major provisions of a Benefit Corporation are:

Purpose
  • shall create general public benefit
  • shall have right to name specific public benefit purposes (e.g. 50% profits to charity)
  • the creation of public benefit is in the best interests of the Benefit Corporation


Accountability
  • directors' duties are to make decisions in the best interests of the corporation
  • directors and officers shall consider effect of decisions on shareholders and employees, suppliers, customers, community, environment (together the "Stakeholders")


Transparency
  • shall publish annual Benefit Report in accordance with recognized third party standards for defining, reporting, and assessing social and environmental performance
  • Benefit Report delivered to: 1) all shareholders; and 2) public website with exclusion of proprietary data


Right of Action
  • only shareholders and directors have right of action
  • Right of Action can be for 1) violation of or failure to pursue general or specific public benefit; 2) violation of duty or standard of conduct


Change of Control/Purpose/Structure
  • shall require a minimum status vote which is a 2/3 vote in most states, but slightly higher in a few states


Benefit Corporations are treated like all other corporations for tax purposes.

Benefits

Benefit Corporation laws address concerns held by entrepreneurs who wish to raise growth capital but fear losing control of the social or environmental mission of their business. In addition, the laws provide companies the ability to consider factors other than the highest purchase offer at the time of sale, in spite of the ruling on Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc.
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc.
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc., 506 A.2d 173 was a landmark decision of the Delaware Supreme Court on hostile takeovers....

. Chartering as a Benefit Corporation also allows companies to distinguish themselves as businesses with a social conscience, and as one that aspires to a standard they consider higher than mere profit-maximization for shareholders.

Third-party certification

Chartering as a Benefit Corporation is not the same as a third-party certified B corporation. The organization B Lab can provide a third-party certification for all forms of for-profit enterprises including Benefit Corporations. To be certified by B Labs, a company must achieve a minimum score of 80 points to show material positive impact, pass a phone review, submit supporting documentation, and be available for an on-site review, B Lab conducts on-site reviews on 10% of the Certified B Corporations each year.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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