Sectorization & L3C Regulatory Arbitrage of Joint Ventures with Nonprofits

C. Bishop
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The raison d’etre for the nascent low-profit limited liability company (L3C) is to stimulate collaboration (“sectorization”) among government, private and charitable sectors in order to redirect for-profit capital models into the nonprofit sector. The hope is that the L3C will not only generate additional resources for charitable purposes, but also fundamentally transform business culture by signaling a more efficient way to “do good while doing well.” The L3C has been criticized for targeting only private foundation program related investments, a capital pipeline already exhausted by existing profit entity models. When compared to the existing nonprofit joint venture, the L3C emerges as a less efficient arbitrage model for stimulating profit sector investment in charitable enterprises. A comparative analysis yields instructive lessons regarding deficiencies in federal tax regulation of program related investments and joint ventures. In both cases, the federal tax rules utilize a differing “control test” to assure the exempt entity directs assets toward its charitable mission and away from private benefit to profit sector participants. This Article provides the first comprehensive comparative theory that the existing nonprofit-profit joint venture model is a more efficient solution to assuring compliance with the charitable mission when blending market returns to market capital investors. This theoretical framework exposes why L3C statutory operating procedures unnecessarily cripple profit efforts, undermine its effectiveness, and present policy dilemmas less prevalent in joint ventures where the nonprofit must exercise control over the business entity rather than simply an investment in the entity. As a result, program related investments should be scaled back and limited to determining only whether an investment jeopardizes a foundation’s exempt mission where the scale of the investment has a self-limiting role.
非营利性合资企业的部门化与L3C监管套利
新生的低利润有限责任公司(L3C)存在的原因是为了刺激政府、私人和慈善部门之间的合作(“部门化”),以便将营利性资本模式转向非营利部门。希望L3C不仅能为慈善事业提供额外的资源,还能从根本上改变企业文化,发出一种更有效的“做好事,做好事”的信号。L3C一直被批评只针对与私募基金会项目相关的投资,这些投资渠道已经被现有的盈利实体模式耗尽。与现有的非营利合资企业相比,L3C是一种效率较低的套利模式,可以刺激慈善企业的利润部门投资。通过比较分析,得出了有关项目相关投资和合资企业联邦税收监管不足的有益教训。在这两种情况下,联邦税收规则使用不同的“控制测试”来确保免税实体将资产用于其慈善使命,而不是将私人利益转移给利润部门的参与者。本文首次提供了综合比较理论,证明现有的非营利-营利性合资企业模式在向市场资本投资者混合市场回报的情况下,更有效地保证了慈善使命的履行。这一理论框架揭示了为什么L3C法定操作程序不必要地削弱了盈利努力,破坏了其有效性,并且在合资企业中,非营利组织必须对企业实体进行控制,而不仅仅是对实体进行投资,因此政策困境在合资企业中不那么普遍。因此,与项目相关的投资应该被缩减,并且仅限于在投资规模具有自我限制作用的情况下,确定投资是否危及基金会的豁免使命。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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