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5.2 - Nonprofit organizations in the Netherlands

from 5 - Germanic countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

Tymen J. van der Ploeg
Affiliation:
VU University
Klaus J. Hopt
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht, Germany
Thomas Von Hippel
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht, Germany
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Summary

Introduction

The term “nonprofit organizations”

In the Netherlands, the term “nonprofit organizations” does not have a legally specific meaning. The term is often used unofficially for organizations that have a purpose other than profit making, and for organizations that are forbidden to distribute their profit to their members. In organizational (civil) law, the term nonprofit organization as such is not used, but the legal definitions of the available organizational forms – the vereniging (association) and the stichting (foundation) – express their nonprofit character (see II A and B). In tax law, a special category of verenigingen (associations) and stichtingen (foundations) is formed by the public benefit organizations; in contrast to other nonprofit organizations, they receive tax benefits (see III).

The non-distribution constraint is certainly an element of the definition of nonprofit organizations in the Netherlands. It applies certainly to foundations; according to regulatory law, at the liquidation of an association the surplus should be distributed to the members unless the articles of association provide otherwise. In associations with a public benefit, the articles of association normally provide otherwise. The legal rule about the distribution of the liquidation surplus to the members is in fact only legitimized for common interest associations, where the members have financed the activities of the association.

From a civil law perspective, one can categorize these into membership organizations (associations) and non-membership organizations (foundations). From a tax law perspective, one can categorize these into public interest organizations and non-public interest organizations.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

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