Description
Book SynopsisAfter Enron first describes the conditions that led to the collapse of Enron and other corporate scandals and the concerns that these developments raised among the public, the press, and political officials. The book then describes and evaluates the initial private and public responses to these developments and concludes that most of these responses were unnecessary, harmful, or inadequate. There are four major lessons learned during the post-Enron scandal era: Don''t count too much on financial accounting. Don''t count too much on auditing. The tax system is an important part of the problem. The rules of corporate governance do not adequately serve the interests of general shareholders. After Enron addresses the major lessons for public policy affecting accounting, auditing, taxation, and corporate government. It proposes a set of policy changes to address the lessons learned from the Enron scandal. The first major set of proposed changes would delegate the authority to establish a
Trade ReviewNiskanen (chairman of the Cato Institute) presents the second book to result from his organization's project assessing the major policy lessons to be drawn from the collapse of the energy giant Enron....This collection of 20 papers consider broader issuers of corporate governance and regulation, including accounting problems and their alternatives, the failure of the entire Enron auditing chain, provisions of the tax code that influence the character of executive compensation and promote the conditions leading to backruptcy, and corporate governance rules that have shifted power to corporate managers relative to shareholders over the past few decades. * Reference and Research Book News *
This is a stimulating and insightful view of the weaknesses of corporate governance and their monitors, and of government policy related to recent corporate scandals. Recommended. * CHOICE *
After Enron should be read by all those interested in the regulatory state and the workings of the market place. -- Frank Vibert * European Policy Forum *
The big question in corporate governance these days is whether the pendulum has swung too far in the direction of regulation. It comes as no surprise to learn that the Cato Institute, the libertarian-minded Washington think tank, thinks it has. Cato has laid out its case in a book of short, accessible essays titled After Enron....It forces those of us who welcome most of these regulations to think hard and critically about them. * The Review of Higher Education *
Table of ContentsChapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 A Crisis of Trust Part 3 Private and Public Actions in Response to the Enron Collapse Chapter 4 Major Private Responses Chapter 5 Political Responses to the Enron Scandal Part 6 Accounting Chapter 7 Don't Count Too Much on Financial Accounting Chapter 8 Corporate Accounting Before and After Enron Part 9 Auditing Chapter 10 Don't Count Too Much on Auditing Chapter 11 The Formal Audit Process Chapter 12 The Market Analysts Chapter 13 Public and Private Rule Making in Securities Markets Chapter 14 Should Congress Repeal Securities Class-Action Reform? Chapter 15 The Business Press as a Corporate Monitor Chapter 16 Lawyers as Corporate Monitors Chapter 17 Bankers as Corporate Monitors Chapter 18 The Credit Rating Agencies Chapter 19 The SEC as a Corporate Monitor Part 20 Taxation Chapter 21 The General Problems of the U.S. Tax System Chapter 22 Compensation, Journalism, and Taxes Chapter 23 Replace the Corporate Income Tax with a Cash-Flow Tax Part 24 Corporate Governance Chapter 25 Corporate Governance Part 26 Major Policy Lessons From the Collapse of Enron Chapter 27 Major Policy Lessons from the Collapse of Enron Chapter 28 Index