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this Page:
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BARBADOS LIMITED LIABILITY
COMPANY
- BARBADOS COMPANY
WITHOUT SHARE CAPITAL
- BARBADOS MUTUAL
INSURANCE COMPANY
- BARBADOS EXTERNAL
COMPANY
- BARBADOS INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS COMPANY
- BARBADOS FOREIGN
SALES CORPORATION
- BARBADOS
GENERAL PARTNERSHIP
- BARBADOS LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
- BARBADOS EXEMPTED
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
- BARBADOS SOCIETIES
WITH RESTRICTED LIABILITY
- BARBADOS INTERNATIONAL
TRUSTS
- BARBADOS
TRUSTS
The
Companies Act 1982 legislates companies in Barbados.
It was modelled on the Canadian Business Corporation
Act. Company forms available under the Act are
limited liability companies, companies without
share capital (for non-profit purposes) and
mutual insurance companies. Most offshore operations
in Barbados make use of the limited liability
company form, and then take offshore status
under one of the enabling pieces of legislation,
including the International Business Companies
Act 1991, the Foreign Sales Corporations Act
1984, and the various specialised financial
company forms.
Companies
are formed under the Companies Act by submitting
Articles of Incorporation, Notices of Directors
and Registered Address and Request for Name
to the Registrar of Companies. The Registrar
issues a Certificate of Incorporation, and the
company exists as from the date of the Certificate.
Incorporation usually takes two or three days;
shelf companies are not available. The Companies
Regulations 1984 establish registration fees
for companies formed under the Companies Act.
A fee of USD750 is payable to the Government
on incorporation and an annual fee of USD250
thereafter.
Barbadian
companies need to have a registered office,
and must keep various documents there, including
minutes of directors' and shareholders' meetings,
registers of shareholders and debenture holders,
and accounting records. There needs to be a
company secretary. Annual returns are not required;
neither are audits unless total assets exceed
USD1 million (USD500,000 before January 1, 2010)
and they do not have to be filed. The audit
threshold is set to be raised from USD1 million
to USD2 million from January 1, 2014.
Under
pressure from the OECD, Barbados is effectively
merging its offshore and onshore sectors, and
the Companies Act is in the process of being
modified.
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Barbados Limited Liability Company
There
needs to be only one shareholder and one director,
who may be corporate; public companies must
have at least three directors. Any company which
is not a public company is a private company.
The Companies Act does not set any minimum level
of capital. Different classes of share are possible;
bearer shares are not provided for in the Act;
shares of no par value are allowed.
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Barbados Company Without
Share Capital
A company without share capital (non-profit
company) must limit its activities to purposes
that are religious, philanthropic, educational
etc etc. There must be at least three directors.
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Barbados Mutual Insurance Company
A
mutual insurance company must be owned directly
or indirectly by its members, and must provide
insurance or reinsurance for the benefit of
its members.
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Barbados External
Company
External companies are defined by the Companies
Act as incorporated or un-incorporated bodies
formed under the laws of a country other than
Barbados. An external company must register
in order to do business in Barbados. Registration
involves submission of basic corporate information
to the Registrar and payment of a fee of BDS3,000.
After registration, an annual return must be
submitted to the Registrar. Registration validates
prior acts of the company under Barbadian law.
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Barbados
International Business Company
The
International Business Company is the most widely
used vehicle for offshore operations in Barbados.
IBC
status is given to companies that are carrying
on the business of international manufacturing
or international trade or commerce. Broadly
speaking, these activities have to be carried
out in Barbados, with exports or the provision
of services being to countries outside the Caricom
area or to other IBCs, exempt insurance companies
or Foreign Sales Corporations (ie other offshore
entities).
The
Act limits the issue of an IBC license to companies
that fulfill the following criteria:
- a
company should be resident in Barbados (resident
means incorporated in or managed and controlled
from Barbados; registered foreign - 'external'
- companies are deemed to be resident);
- no
more than 10% of the assets of a company
would accrue on a liquidation to holders
of its shares and loan capital resident
in the Caricom area;
- no
more than 10% of the interest and dividend
payments made by a company should go to
individuals resident in the Caricom region.
Offshore banks (see Offshore
Business Sectors), exempt insurance companies
(likewise) and foreign sales corporations (see
below) are not eligible for IBC status.
IBC Licenses are issued by the Minister of Finance
and are valid for one year, renewable annually
for a fee of BDS250. The Minister will issue
an assurance to an applicant that the benefits
of the Act will be available for 15 years.
An
IBC pays tax at a low rate and is entitled to
various other benefits (see Offshore
Legal and Tax Regimes).
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Barbados
Foreign Sales Corporation
The US Tax Reform Act of 1984
enabled US companies to open 'Foreign Sales
Corporations' (FSC) in a number of offshore
centres, giving tax benefits to the US holding
companies; Barbados is one of those countries.
A Foreign Sales Corporation normally takes the
form of a limited liability company (see above).
The governing legislation is the Foreign Sales
Corporation Act 1984. FSCs are only permitted
to operate with customers outside the Caricom
area, and such sales are termed 'foreign trade
transactions'. FSCs are licensed by the Ministry
of Trade and Commerce; an FSC must:
- be
incorporated under the Companies Act;
- carry
on 'foreign trade transactions' as its principal
activity;
- be
owned by non-Caricom residents.
The
definition of 'foreign trade transactions' was
loosened to permit some trading with Caricom
by the Foreign Sales Corporation (Amendment)
Act 1994. Barbados also introduced the 'shared'
FSC under which a number of smaller US companies
can club together to operate through an FSC,
thus reducing costs.
After
payment of an application fee of BDS200, the
license application itself is accompanied by
the Certificate of Incorporation, certain other
documents, and a license fee of BDS1,000 (companies
with turnover below BDS10m) or BDS2,000 (companies
with turnover above BDS10m). Similar fees are
payable annually on renewal of the license.
There are substantial local tax advantages for
FSCs, as well as the beneficial US treatment
itself (see Offshore
Legal and Tax Regimes).
In
1999, the WTO ruled against the US FSC legislation,
in response to a complaint from the EU. After
a long series of appeals and counter-appeals,
the US finally accepted defeat in 2002, and
the FSC legislation was repealed in 2004, along
with a temporary replacement regime called the
Extra-Territorial Inclusion Act, which had also
been ruled illegitimate.
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Barbados General Partnership
Partnerships fall under the Partnerships Act
Cap 313 as amended, which is basically similar
to the English Partnership Act 1890. No registration
of partnerships is necessary, and there does
not have to be a written partnership agreement.
Partners are liable for the whole debts of the
partnership. Partnerships are fiscally transparent,
and the partnership tax assessment will fall
on the partners individually. Apart from the
need to file a tax return, there are no filing
requirements for partnerships.
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Barbados
Limited Partnership
Barbados Limited Partnerships are governed by
the Limited Partnerships Act Cap 312 as amended.
The maximum number of partners is 20 (but only
10 if the business of the partnership is banking).
There
are one or more general partners, with unlimited
liability, and a number of limited partners.
A Limited Partnership must be registered with
the Registration Office; otherwise it will be
deemed to be a general partnership.
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Barbados
Exempted Limited Partnership
Barbados has announced new legislation for Exempted
Limited Partnerships. They will be equivalent
to International Business Companies in many
respects, including the restrictions on local
trading and their tax treatment (see Offshore
Legal and Tax Regimes).
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Barbados
Societies with Restricted Liability
The Society with Restricted Liability (SRL)
is similar to the Limited Liability Company
in a number of other jurisdictions - it is designed
to allow US taxpayers to claim individual tax
treatment on their participation in an entity
which is treated as a corporation in its own
jurisdiction.
SRLs
are formed under the Societies with Restricted
Liability Act 1995, and have the following characteristics:
- a
maximum duration of 50 years (this restriction
was removed by a legislative amendment in
2004);
- limited
liability for the members;
- legal
personality in Barbados;
- restrictions
on the transferability of shares (called
quotas);
SRLs do not need to have any physical presence
in Barbados, but must maintain a local registered
agent and registered office; they are classed
as exempt or non-exempt.
Exempt
SRLs are subject to the same limitations on
ownership and trading as International Business
Companies (see above) and receive the same tax
treatment (see Offshore
Legal and Tax Regimes). A legislative amendment
in 2004 permitted Exempt SRLs to trade within
Caricom.
Non-exempt
SRLs can trade within Caricom and Barbados,
and are not subject to the ownership limitations
that apply to IBCs. They can take advantage
of tax treaties (not open to IBCs or exempt
SRLs.)
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Barbados
Trusts
Trusts in Barbados are governed by English common
law and by the Trustees Act Cap 250 as amended,
which deals with the powers of trustees. Appeal
is to the Privy Council. There is no registration
requirement or stamp duty; trustees can be non-resident
as long as one is resident. A resident corporation
acting as trustee must be licensed under the
Offshore Banking Act (see Offshore
Legal and Tax Regimes). Exchange controls
apply to local trusts.
The
Hague Convention has not been implemented; the
maximum perpetuity period is 100 years.
Local
(domestic) trusts are taxed as separate entities
(see Domestic Corporate
Taxation).
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Barbados
International Trusts
The International Trusts Act 1995 introduced
purpose trusts and asset protection trusts,
as well as strengthened protection against forced
heirship provisions, non-recognition of foreign
judgements, and protection against creditors.
The rule against perpetuities does not apply,
and accumulation of income is permitted for
up to 100 years.
International
trusts have considerable tax advantages (see
Offshore Legal and Tax
Regimes) and are exempt from exchange control;
the following conditions must be fulfilled:
- the
settlor must be non-resident when the trust
is created;
- trust
property must not include Barbadian real
estate.
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