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Our modern society is hooked on growthan addiction difficult
to cure. The old maxim "hard work generates success"
somehow got lost along the way and was replaced by "work
smarter, not harder".
For many business leaders, what starts out as ambition often
turns to plain old greed. Multi-million dollar salaries (plus
bonus, plus options) are typical for top positions. People
live the lifestyleexpensive homes in several locations,
condos on the beach, ski-chalets in Aspen, luxury cars, and
world travel to the best resortshigh living usually at companies'
expense. Properties purchased are seldom paid for in cash,
and most-often are leveraged with bank-loans and mortgages,
with deals made on golf courses and ski slopes. People actually
begin to think "money is made this way", and that
they deserve it because they are better and smarter than most.
They hobnob with presidents and politicians; make large contributions
to campaigns and lobby at the highest levels becoming part
of crony capitalism.
All this sounds plausibleuntil growth and profits falter.
Most executives have already changed their lifestyles to accommodate
their wealth. It's fun to scale up, but not easy to scale
down. This is when deceit begins.
People get used to extrapolating growth and success, especially
when it works for a while. When growth stops, many start to
fudge the truth hoping that the dip is temporary and can be
made up tomorrow. The fudging can quickly turn to lying, and
then extend to cheating and stealing. Few people start off
dishonestlymost drift into increasingly dubious behavior
through insidious wealth addiction.
Here's how creeping criminality occurs for senior executives
with bonus plans based on growth and profit goals. During
a growth period, goals are met and bonuses are earned consistently,
which sets the standard and conditions the lifestyle. Inevitably,
a quarterly stock market result comes up short. Sales that
are close (only a matter of a few signatures, the big order
will arrive next week) are "booked". Shipments waiting
for just a few late components are "shipped-in-place."
Invoices are printed and the shipments went out the dooror
at least that's how it appears on paper. The bonus is in the
bag!
But then, the big order is cancelled and the late components
never arrive. Now the proverbial "feces hits the fan".
The orders and shipments must be "de-booked". But
this means that all the already-spent bonuses will need to
be refunded. Problems escalate and only a cover-up can save
the dayhopefully to be corrected with a boost next quarter.
Now the cover-ups have to be covered up and the disease extends
quickly to all parts of the businesscash-budgets are met
by holding up vendor payments, inventories are boosted by
keeping obsolete goods, etc. Cover-ups become part of the
culture.
Honest employees (frequently lower than executive level)
are usually an unwilling part of the process. In the old days,
there wasn't much they could do except complain upwardswhere
the problem originated. But today, email is the "electronic
conscience". At Enronthe current, still unfolding classic
chronicle of crony capitalismemails became the "smoking
gun". Beyond the now famous email written by an accounting
supervisor to the CEO, now part of congressional testimony,
there were literally thousands of emails flying back and forth
electronically between employees who were no longer unwitting
dupes.
The annual audit is supposed to straighten out the mess.
But, it turns out that auditors have lots of leeway in their
interpretations. Enron fired their regular auditors (Deloitte
& Touche) for not being "aggressive" enough
and hired Anderson in their place (both are Big Five auditors).
The agreement to be more aggressivemade on the golf course
among friendsseemed simply like agreeing to be smarter than
the other old-fashioned, fuddy-duddy bean counters. With potential
auditing fees in several tens of millions, Anderson made the
deal, innocently enough at first though it quickly turned
nasty. The accountants had caught the disease. Now Global
Crossing, another big Anderson client, appears to be suffering
from the same ailment.
The words "aggressive" and "smart" are
much admired in modern business. "Aggressive" accounting
is mooted as being "smart" enough keep up with the
latest legal loopholes and knowing the fine line between avoiding
and evading taxes. Most accounting firms (including the Big
Five) promote their ability to assist clients in constructing
off-balance sheet financing within the limits of the law.
The use of offshore corporate structures not only to hide
these activities, but also to avoid paying U.S. taxes, is
unethical even if it is legal. The closer they are to the
limits of legality, the more they are admired for being able
to get away with it. When they start producing results they
are recognized as "smart". And the CEO and CFO were
"smart" to have hired them. This is exactly how
Enron got away with making big profits in some years, not
only without paying any taxes, but actually receiving significant
cash rebates.
It turns out that the recent Enron debaclethe single largest
bankruptcy in historyis only the tip of the iceberg. Off
book accounting is not something that was invented by Enronit
is disingenuous for the press and congress to present it as
an evil that was invented by them. The big accountants, aided
and abetted by large financial institutions, consistently
look for tax and legal loopholes and actively market their
ability to do just that.
A disease was born called 'Enronitis' and it has become endemic
in our system. Many other companies have large hidden liabilities
off their books a la Enron. Once Pandora's Box is open,
all hell could break loose with disastrous consequences to
our economy.
You make your list of deceitful-accounting candidates. I
have my own. Send me an email
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Copyright © 2002 Jim Pinto. All Rights
Reserved.
Jim Pinto is a technology entrepreneur,
investor, futurist, writer and commentator.
You can email him at: jim@jimpinto.com.
Or look at his poems, prognostications and predictions on
his website: www.JimPinto.com
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