FunctionThe function of SOEs is to operate successfully as a business, as profitable as those not owned by the Crown. The section of the Act defining this is usually interpreted as meaning that SOEs are expected to ready themselves for privatisation, though this is not always the case. Two Ministers of the Crown act as the shareholding ministers in the company. In the case of SOEs these are usually the Minister of State-Owned Enterprises and the Minister responsible for the particular company. Crown Company Monitoring Advisory UnitThe Crown is assisted in the running of SOEs and other Crown-owned companies by the Crown Company Monitoring Advisory Unit (CCMAU - pronounced "see-see-maow") in The Treasury. List of current state-owned enterprisesCurrent state-owned enterprises include:
Former state-owned enterprisesFormer state-owned enterprises come in three forms - those removed from the Schedules of the Act and made Crown entities, those removed and not privatised, and those removed and privatised. Well-known SOEs that became Crown entity companies include broadcasting companies Television New Zealand Limited (TVNZ) and Radio New Zealand Limited (RNZ). Privatised state-owned enterprisesPrivatised state-owned enterprises include:
Source: The New Zealand Treasury Shell state-owned enterprisesSome SOEs, such as ECNZ, are effectively small SOEs or shell companies. Companies that are still SOEs but are now shell companies, having had most of their assets privatised, include:
Former, non-SOE state-owned corporations
Other Crown-owned companiesOther, non-SOE Crown-owned companies are the Crown entity companies. These are the Crown Research Institutes (CRIs), the broadcasting companies Television New Zealand Limited (TVNZ) and Radio New Zealand Limited (RNZ), and the New Zealand Venture Investment Fund Limited. The Crown also has a majority stake in Air New Zealand Limited. See also
External links and sources
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