Did the Cooperative Start Life as Joint-Stock Company? Business Law and Cooperatives in Spain, 1869-1931
Yale Economics Department Working Paper No. 81
Yale University Economic Growth Center Discussion Paper No. 987
35 Pages Posted: 9 Jun 2010 Last revised: 11 Jun 2010
Date Written: June 7, 2010
Abstract
Studies of Spanish cooperatives date their spread from the Law on Agrarian Syndicates of 1906. But the first legislative appearance of cooperatives is an 1869 measure that permitted general incorporation for lending companies. The 1931 general law on cooperatives, which was the first act permitting the formation of cooperatives in any activity, reflects the gradual disappearance of the cooperative’s “business” characteristics. In this paper we trace the Spanish cooperative’s legal roots in business law and its connections to broader questions of the freedom of association, the formation of joint-stock enterprises, and the liability of investors in business and cooperative entities. Our account underscores the similarities of the organizational problems approach by cooperatives and business firms, while at the same time respecting the distinctive purposes cooperatives served.
Keywords: cooperative, general incorporation, business enterprise, freedom of association, freedom of contract
JEL Classification: N43, N23, K20
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Putting the Corporation in its Place
By Timothy W. Guinnane, Ron Harris, ...
-
Corporations are People Too: A Multi-Dimensional Approach to the Corporate Personhood Puzzle
-
The Limited Liability Company: A Study of the Emerging Entity
By Robert R. Keatinge, Larry E. Ribstein, ...
-
Making Do with Imperfect Law: Small Firms in France and Germany 1890-1935
-
Risk, Incentives and Contracts: Partnerships in Rio De Janeiro 1870-1891
By Ran Abramitzky, Zephyr Frank, ...