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ARCHIVES ::
SEPTEMBER 2002 :: LAW & POLITICS
Laying
Down the Law
Crackdown on Fraud Signals New Relationship Between Government and
Business
By
Jeanne Cummings, Jacob M. Schlesinger and Michael Schroeder
Staff Reporters of The Wall Street Journal
A new law to crack
down on business fraud marks a dramatic shift in the balance of
power between the U.S. government and American corporations.
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photograph:
Corbis
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| The
president says the new law is aimed at restoring confidence
in the stock market
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Just two years ago,
during his campaign, President Bush courted business leaders by
promising to scale back Washington's interference in their affairs,
with less regulation and more encouragement of free-market competition.
But that effort has been hurt by the stream of corporate scandals
in the past year, especially those in industries where the government
had reduced its regulation, such as energy and telecommunications.
Now, the oil-executive-turned-politician,
who filled his cabinet with former CEOs, is signaling a new direction.
This summer, he signed legislation that sharply boosts fraud penalties
-- including longer prison terms for white-collar criminals -- and
requires corporations to be more forthright in their reports to
investors. Mr. Bush said the new law was needed because the corporate
fraud had undermined investor confidence in the stock market and
threatened the economy.
"America's system
of free enterprise, with all its risk and all its rewards, is a
strength of our country and a model for the world," Mr. Bush
said during the bill-signing ceremony. "Yet free markets are
not a jungle in which only the unscrupulous survive or a financial
free-for-all guided only by greed. The fundamentals of a free market
-- buying and selling, saving and investing -- require clear rules
and confidence in basic fairness."
The new law is the
culmination of a drive triggered by Enron's colossal collapse late
last year. It advanced in fits and starts and appeared at a number
of points to have died. At first, concerns about corporate scandals
were confined to Enron and its accounting firm, Arthur Andersen.
But as corporate-governance scandals spread to Global Crossing,
Tyco International, Adelphia Communications, WorldCom and others,
and the stock market plunged, momentum built quickly for broader
reforms.
'Era of False Profits'
While the White House
initially pressed for more-intense enforcement of existing laws,
Senate Democratic leaders pushed for tougher legislation. But they
had difficulty winning support until late June when WorldCom disclosed
its nearly $4 billion accounting fraud, cementing broad bipartisan
support for tough reforms.
Among its provisions,
the law:
- Establishes a five-member
board to oversee the accounting industry, with investigative and
disciplinary powers
- Prohibits auditors
from offering certain types of consulting services to corporate
clients, in order to reduce conflicts of interest
- Raises the maximum
penalty for securities fraud to 25 years from 15 years
- Creates a new crime
for destroying, altering or fabricating records in federal investigations,
punishable by a 20-year prison sentence
- Requires CEOs and
chief financial officers to certify financial reports -- that
is, sign under oath that the contents are true -- and forfeit
their own profits and bonuses when earnings are restated due to
securities fraud.
"This law says
to every dishonest corporate leader: You'll be exposed and punished,"
Mr. Bush said. "The era of low standards and false profits
is over. No board room in America is above or beyond the law
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There will not be a different ethical standard for corporate America
than the standard that applies to everyone else."
The president's harsh
tone is just the latest example of the changing relationship between
Washington and Corporate America, and the shift away from the government's
historically laissez-faire, or "let them be," attitude.
Mr. Bush's choice to head the Securities and Exchange Commission,
former Wall Street lawyer Harvey Pitt, last year pledged a "kinder
and gentler place for accountants." These days, Mr. Pitt says,
"criminal charges may be too good for the people who brought
about this mess," and he boasts about the number of fraud cases
the SEC has launched and the severity of penalties it has imposed.
The Justice Department,
which until recently focused mainly on the war on terrorism, is
joining the fray, prosecuting Arthur Andersen and heading what Mr.
Bush describes as a new interagency "financial-crimes SWAT
team, overseeing the investigation of corporate abusers and bringing
them to account." Congress is moving ahead with its own investigations
into corporate wrongdoing at several companies.
In sum, the early 21st
century may be turning into one of those periods in American history
-- such as the populist and progressive eras at the turn of the
last century, and the New Deal of the 1930s -- where exposure of
corporate excesses spurs new government control over business.
Now, as then, the changes
are promoted to conservatives and business leaders as the only way
to instill confidence in free markets and ensure their viability.
"At this moment, America's greatest economic need is higher
ethical standards, standards enforced by strict laws," Mr.
Bush said.
'Responsible Investment'
The political stakes are high: Not only does Mr. Bush want to keep
Americans in the stock market, he wants to persuade them to put
their Social Security retirement funds there as well. "Buying
stock gives them opportunity to build wealth over the long term,
and this is the very kind of responsible investment we must promote
in America," he says.
Business and accounting
lobbyists have been assessing the damage from the new law. "We
know the changes demanded by the legislation will be dramatic and
challenging for the CPA profession," the American Institute
of Certified Public Accountants says. For decades, accounting firms
donated heavily to both political parties, and easily fended off
new regulation.
Now, it will be much
harder for auditors to look the other way in approving faulty corporate
bookkeeping. The new five-member oversight board will have the power
to examine audit firms and discipline wrongdoing.
The question now is
how much farther the pendulum will swing from big business to big
government. Much of that will depend on how badly financial markets
and the economy perform over the next few months.
Franklin Roosevelt's
reforms, including the creation of the SEC, weren't enacted until
1933, four years after the stock market crashed and at a time when
the economy was mired in the Great Depression. The U.S. today is
nowhere near that state, and if the economy starts to rebound, the
momentum for far-reaching changes could quickly dissipate. The benefits
of laissez-faire will still be seen to have outweighed the costs.
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