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corporation |
Also found in: Medical, Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia | 0.03 sec. |
corporationA legally-constituted joint enterprise, usually for the conduct of business and for tax advantages. Types of corporations include publicly-traded corporations, which sell stock to the public to raise capital, and privately-held corporations. Corporations are legal entities distinct from the individuals who manage their affairs or from the owners of their stock. The legal status of a corporation as a unique entity gives the owners and managers freedom from liability for the corporation's actions. The corporation can be sued and can sue, and it can make contracts. This limitation of liability is essential for growth and development, since large amounts of capital must be raised from many sources. The affairs of the corporation are governed by bylaws and managed by a board of directors. Laws vary from state to state and nation to nation as to how many directors are required and whether they must be stockholders. The board acts on behalf of the stockholders and can be held accountable for failure to abide by the bylaws or for faulty judgement that results in losses. The development of multinational corporations (enterprises that operate in a number of countries) has been a subject of increasing controversy since they operate only in their own interest, often at odds with government policies in those countries. They also can cause disruptions in domestic economies as they shift facilities and marketing operations in search of the greatest advantage. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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In a deal which represents its first corporate store in SoHo, Verizon Wireless, whose corporate entity is New York SMSA Limited Partnership, has signed a 4,750 s/f, ten-year lease, to occupy the ground floor of 581 Broadway between Houston and Prince Streets. Additionally, erosion of policy limits by even a solvent corporate entity often left individual directors and officers with little or no residual coverage for their own defense and settlement. While this independence makes them ripe for acquisition by a larger advertising or media company, it could also be threatened if merged into a corporate entity. |
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