Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- PART I Perspectives in company law, SECTION 1: European company law: regulatory competition and free movement of companies
- 1 The European Model Company Act Project
- 2 The Societas Privata Europaea: a basic reform of EU law on business organizations
- 3 Ius Audacibus. The future of EU company law
- 4 Free movement of capital and protectionism after Volkswagen and Viking Line
- 5 Centros and the cost of branching
- 6 Towards the end of the real seat theory in Europe?
- 7 The Commission Recommendations of 14 December 2004 and of 15 February 2005 and their implementation in Germany
- 8 The Nordic corporate governance model – a European model?
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 3: Takeover law
- PART II Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 1: European perspectives
- PART 2 Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 2: Transatlantic perspectives
- PART III Miscellaneous
- Index
2 - The Societas Privata Europaea: a basic reform of EU law on business organizations
from PART I - Perspectives in company law, SECTION 1: European company law: regulatory competition and free movement of companies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- PART I Perspectives in company law, SECTION 1: European company law: regulatory competition and free movement of companies
- 1 The European Model Company Act Project
- 2 The Societas Privata Europaea: a basic reform of EU law on business organizations
- 3 Ius Audacibus. The future of EU company law
- 4 Free movement of capital and protectionism after Volkswagen and Viking Line
- 5 Centros and the cost of branching
- 6 Towards the end of the real seat theory in Europe?
- 7 The Commission Recommendations of 14 December 2004 and of 15 February 2005 and their implementation in Germany
- 8 The Nordic corporate governance model – a European model?
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 2: Corporate governance, shareholders' rights and auditing
- PART 1 Perspectives in company law, SECTION 3: Takeover law
- PART II Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 1: European perspectives
- PART 2 Perspectives in financial regulation, SECTION 2: Transatlantic perspectives
- PART III Miscellaneous
- Index
Summary
Introduction
It is a great pleasure to contribute to this liber amicorum in honour of Eddy Wymeersch. His vast and seemingly unlimited interest in company and securities law offered an equally broad choice of subjects for this article. Working with a team of researchers in Tilburg's Center for Company Law on a broader project aiming at revealing the basic elements and guiding principles of reform of company and enterprise law, I decided to carve out from this project some observations on the intended introduction of a statute for European Private Companies.
The idea for an EPC is not new. Shortly after publication of the first draft for the SE Statute, Mme Boucourechliev published her ‘Pour une SARL Européenne’. Together with Drury, Hommelhof inter alia, she was involved in drafting a proposal that was published by CREDA/Medef in 1998. The High Level Group of Company Law Experts reiterated the case for an EPC and the EC in its 2003 Action Plan and gave it a mid-term priority. In 2006 a consultation document was published focusing on the scope and nature of an EPC statute: (a) should it be available to single-owned firms and quasi-partnerships or also to private firms with ‘dispersed’ ownership?; (b) should the statute be standalone and exhaustive or – like the SE statute – build on and refer to national law?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Perspectives in Company Law and Financial Regulation , pp. 18 - 42Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009