Another day, another Wall Street scandal. The regularity
and frequency with which "bad news" is coming out of the corporate world
in the US, involving some of the giants of international business, is
almost laughable. Each week, at least one major company is being forced to
reveal that it has been involved in financial irregularities, often of
breathtaking extent.
Some companies "forget" to record their losses, or record them as loans to
specially created subsidiaries. Other companies "just happen" to slip in
normal expenses as "capital expenses", thereby removing them from the
profit-and-loss account. In some instances, important flows of finance are
simply not recorded at all, and just disappear from the balance sheets.
Other accounting discrepancies include understatement of interest
payments, fictitious investments, and simply taking cash out of employees’
pensions and social security funds.
In most of these cases, the numbers involved are not small, usually
amounting to several billion dollars. And the indications are that these
malpractices are not just once-off mistakes, but have been going for some
years – suggesting that auditors have been negligent or even complicit.
Quite often, there is even no mention of these practices in the companies’
books, making it difficult to trace what exactly has been going on.
The biggest and most public scam of recent times was that concerning the
energy trading multinational giant Enron, which was earlier seen as the
most effective symbol of the swashbuckling new globalised capitalism of
the 1990s. But now it turns out that the case of Enron – huge and dramatic
as it was – is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of shady and
ultimately unsustainable business practices in the international corporate
world.
Consider just some of the scams that are now plaguing the already
overworked Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the
US government agency
that is supposed to regulate all this. The company Adelphia is facing an
SEC probe into $3.1bn in off-balance sheet loans, some of which were used
to cover the assets of the founder of the company and his family. Global
Crossing is under investigation for its
accounting treatment of long-term
wholesale capacity contracts, which artificially inflated profits. Lucent
Technologies and Peregrine Systems have been found to be "adjusting"
fiscal revenues and are being forced to restate incomes and profits for
the past few years. The largest retailing company in the
US,
K-Mart, has had to lower its recorded profits after admitting to incorrect
accounting methods.
Enron, as is well
known, admitted
to improperly inflating earnings and hiding debt through a complex web of
off-balance sheet business partnerships. The company’s subsequent
bankruptcy created a ripple effect across the corporate and financial
world even in developing countries. Other energy trading companies are not
pristine either. Duke Energy has admitted
to "round-trip" or "wash" trades, in which two or more traders buy and
sell energy among themselves for the same price and at the same time,
which added at least $1 billion to its revenues over three years. Dynegy,
the company that earlier offered to rescue Enron just before its collapse,
is being investigated for using partnerships in deals to inflate its cash
flow.
And then there is the
insider trading, along with instances of top management seeking to save
the value of their own assets of reward themselves before the imminent
collapse of the company. The founder and other top managers of Computer
Associates awarded themselves more than a billion dollars in shares (which
they then sold) only days before issuing a profit warning which sent the
share price down. The founder and CEO of Imclone Systems was found to be
selling large numbers of shares held by his family and friends just before
the cancer drug which was its sole product was denied approval by the US
FDA. The chairman and other executives of Tyco International spent vast
amounts on luxury housing for themselves and other perks, just before
declaring losses.
The list goes on and
on. The most recent examples are of the telecom giant WorldCom and the
multinational Xerox, both of which represent in some ways the essence of
current global capitalism.
WorldCom, like Enron,
was a potent symbol of aggressive capitalism in the past decade. Like
Enron, it is a company of recent origin, founded
by
the flamboyant entrepreneur Bernie Ebbers, who was perhaps the most
aggressive acquirer during the US mergers and acquisitions boom of the
1990s. WorldCom's stock market success even surpassed that of Enron.
Before the US
stock market started to sag in 2001, WorldCom’s asset value had soared to
$180bn - nearly three times that of Enron at its peak.
WorldCom has now admitted that
$3.8
billion of operating costs were treated as capital spending, forcing it to
restate results for 2001 and the first quarter of 2002. Since the company
is already facing losses, it is likely that it will soon file for
bankruptcy and default on its $35 billion debt.
Just a few days later, Xerox admitted that it would have to reclassify
more than $2 billion of its revenues. Under pressure from the SEC, it has
subsequently announced that the extent of overstatement of revenues for a
five-year period was even greater, at more than $6.4 billion. Once again
the auditors at Xerox, as usual one of the international "Big Five", had
apparently not noticed the discrepancies for all these years.
Obviously, the story is
not going to end here, and many more such cases will probably emerge in
the near future. What exactly is going on? What explains this sudden
flurry of unsavoury revelations and the apparent collapse of even minimal
corporate accounting norms that these cases are bringing to light?
Forget, for a moment,
the issues of morality, corporate ethics, and all that. Forget even the
interests of the unfortunate shareholders of all these companies, which
include not just get-rich-quick financiers but also workers’ pension fund
managers and other presumably worthy groups. The real question is what all
this tells us about the current phase of international capitalism, and
what implications there are for the near future.
The first point to note
is that such scams are not new or unexpected; in fact they are part of
capitalism’s normal functioning. Only the most naïve of interpretations of
the history of capitalism would leave out the crucial role played by
fraud, deceit and skullduggery in the accumulation of capital and its
subsequent use. And the notion that the "new" capitalism is somehow more
open, accountable and democratic, is a false illusion purveyed by the
media which also have major stakes in the system.
The second point is
that such scams typically emerge at the end of a boom, or when it is
beginning to peter out. It is not that the scams cause the financial or
economic collapse; rather, they are symptoms of the turning point, when
companies find that profit expectations are not being met, and try to
prevent or delay the anticipated downturn with whatever means they
possess, including fraud. Thus, while many of the financial malpractices
have been going on for several years, they have been exposed only
recently, as the economic slowdown and the stock market bear trend have
fed into each other. This is characteristic of the "revulsion" phase of
the financial cycle.
The third point has to
do with the specific nature of
US
capitalism, which is "capital-market-based" rather than "bank-based".
After the financial crises in Japan and South Korea, bank-based systems
(especially in Asia) came in for a lot of criticism internationally, for
being opaque and prone to "crony" behaviour and clientelism. The current
spate of scandals in the US shows that capital-market-based systems can be
even more problematic. Not only do they allow (and even encourage)
creative accounting, they are prone to the worst forms of "insider"
excesses.
More to the point, they
may even force managements to misstate actual results, since so much of
the stock market value depends on this, and the stock value in turn
typically determines not just assets but even management’s own
remuneration. Those investigating WorldCom have found that
the important sums
involved in recent wrongly classified transactions — which reduced
reported operating expenses over the last five quarters — were exactly
those needed for WorldCom to meet its profit margin goals, and so keep its
shareholders satisfied.
This does not mean that it is only the US corporate world which is in
trouble. It is likely, as some European analysts have suggested, that
because Western European accounting norms are stricter such cases of fraud
will be less common and the European bourse may even benefit from the
current revulsion away from US stocks. Indeed, the recent downward drift
of the dollar – which has required co-ordinated central bank intervention
to slow down – is one indication of this. But European corporations are by
no means immune, as may become clear quite soon. First, the same
macroeconomic forces of slowdown and reduced investor confidence are
likely to affect European companies just as they have already hit Japanese
and US corporations. Second, across the world the pattern has been to take
on more and more elements of the "US model", even in bank-based systems
such as in France and Germany, and so such financial scandals are more
likely there now than in the past.
It is clear the SEC-type regulation is inadequate to monitor and regulate
markets which are so open to fraud because of the severe information
problems they suffer from. It is also clear that during a slowdown, more
and more cases of explicit and implicit fraud are likely, and they in turn
can add to the more bearish investor sentiment which in turn would worsen
the slowdown.
All these instances – and the new ones that are almost inevitably going to
emerge from the woodwork quite soon – add up to a really big financial
mess, and certainly do portend a major crisis of confidence for corporate
US. Unfortunately, however, they still do not signify the end of
capitalism as we currently know it. In fact, they do not even mean that
the corporate world will necessarily become much cleaner and more
"ethical" as a result. But if they do bring about a much more serious
public reconsideration of the system as a whole, then they are probably to
be welcomed.
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