Betekenis van:
private foundation

private foundation
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a charity that does not receive a major part of its support from the public

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. ÖGB directly owned 51 % and indirectly through its private foundation Österreichische Gewerkschaftliche Solidarität Privatstiftung (ÖGSP) 49 %.
    2. A private-law foundation could be used in the same way as Wfa without any effect on the use of its revenues for its special purpose.
    3. ÖGB directly owned 51 % and indirectly through its private foundation Österreichische Gewerkschaftliche Solidarität Privatstiftung (ÖGSP) 49 %. ÖGB is the founder of ÖGSP.
    4. Hence, the investment by the municipality in the foundation and the investment by the foundation in the passive network do not pass the ‘market investor test’ as a market operator would not have invested in the passive network, as experienced by the municipality when it contacted private investors.
    5. In the measure at hand, the envisaged contractual relationship between the operator of the active layer and the municipality/the foundation reflects rather a classical private-public-partnership than the entrustment and implementation of a Service of General Economic Interest.
    6. If Wfa is compared to a private, non-profit-making entity (e.g. a foundation), the private owner of such an entity would have acted in the same way in order to put the assets, which cannot be used for any other purpose, to a commercial use.
    7. However, as the privatisation mandate provided for the divestiture of all of ÖIAG’s shares, it was only on the basis of the transaction structure proposed by all bidders (an Austrian registered private foundation) that ÖIAG was able to sell its shares in Austrian Airlines while retaining, for the airline, the valuable traffic rights in question and carrying out a complete privatisation.
    8. There exist in the Community and in third countries, including the countries covered by the activities of the European Training Foundation, regional and/or national, public and/or private facilities which can be called upon to collaborate in the effective provision of aid in the area of human capital development, in particular education and training in a lifelong learning perspective.
    9. Clause 12 of the Old Public Service Contract lays down in detail which costs can be compensated for and how they are to be calculated: the coverage differential (the difference in costs borne by RTP Channel 1 and the costs borne by the largest private television operator), the operating deficit in the Autonomous Regions, the deficit in running the audiovisual library, the operational cost of RTP-International, the cost of operating the structure for cooperation with the Portuguese-speaking African countries (PALOPs), the cost of allowing viewing time for certain entities, the cost of delegations and correspondents, and the costs of the S. Carlos National Theatre Foundation.