Low-Profit Limited Liability Companies (L3Cs): Many Traps for the Unwary Social Entrepreneur

Comment by Christopher D. Hilton

Amid a sluggish economy and fiscal challenges at every level of government, the low-profit limited liability company (L3C) has spread rapidly over the past four years, promising a way to spur investment in small businesses and achieve socially beneficial goals with minimal governmental expense or oversight. The L3Cā€™s calculated and focused marketing campaign has convinced eight states, including Louisiana, to adopt this new business structure, but the substance of this corporate form leaves much to be desired. Although the L3C is designed to combine investment capital from nonprofit foundations and private investors, the current L3C laws fail to deliver on that promise. The L3C business form, with its distortion of tax policy, inherently conflicting goals, and intractable governance problems, offers nothing but pitfalls and obstacles to the socially beneficial, hybrid enterprises that it purports to help.


About the Author

Christopher D. Hilton. J.D. candidate 2013, Tulane University Law School; B.A. 2009, Tulane University.

Citation

87 Tul. L. Rev. 169 (2012)