The Law of Unintended Consequences

In the aftermath of Enron‘s demise, Congressmen fell over themselves in self-righteous indignation proposing legislation that would ensure that such a debacle would never occur again. Not only does the nature of man ensure that another Enron debacle will occur, Congressional laws enacted in a misguided attempt to overwrite man’s nature often have unintended (and in this case, quite costly) consequences.
The Wall Street Journal reports today (subscription required) that U.S. companies are complaining that new Enron-resultant rules regarding corporate accountability are costing extraordinary amounts of money and management time.
The rules stem primarily from the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which Congress enacted for the purpose of enhancing corporate governance on the heels of the Enron, Tyco, and WorldCom accounting scandals. The regulations were intended to strengthen corporate accountability and thus, restore investor confidence. Proponents of the statute contended that the new regs will help companies save money because they will avoid costly problems that would occur but for the additional regs.
However, reality is often far different than theory. As the WSJ article points out:

While there is agreement that governance rules are needed, some companies cited the increased cost of complying. “The real cost isn’t the incremental dollars, it is having people that should be focused on the business focused instead on complying with the details of the rules,” said Peter Bible, chief accounting officer at General Motors Corp. “Everybody feels they have to do something to react to the corporate scandals, [but] you really have to scratch your head and say, ‘How is this really benefiting our shareholders?’ ”
The rules are coming into effect at a time when corporations already are battling other increasing costs, including health-care expenses. Even before the most expensive Sarbanes-Oxley rules take effect, companies say their audit costs are increasing by as much as 30% or more this year due to tougher audit and accounting standards, including complex rules to bring more off-balance-sheet items onto the books. Companies also are paying steep fees to fund a new accounting-oversight board — as much as $2 million apiece annually for some large businesses.
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A survey of 321 companies released Tuesday shows that businesses with more than $5 billion in revenue expect to spend an average of $4.7 million each implementing the new 404 rule this year, according to Financial Executives International, which represents top corporate officials. Much of the money is being spent on consultants, lawyers, auditors and new software.

One of my sage clients summed it up in this manner: “The lawyers win again.”

Kerry writing to the Tehran Times?

In a time when our country is at war, this article is simply an excellent example of remarkably poor judgment. Thanks to Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit for the link.

Google v. Microsoft

The Seattle Times runs a good article on the brewing storm between Google and Microsoft , and how Microsoft better not think that Google will be as easy to defeat as Netscape was in the browser war.

OPEC Announces Production Cut

The NY Times reports that OPEC made a surprise announcement earlier today that it was cutting its production quotas. The Houston Chronicle reports that Crude prices rose on the news. The Wall Street Journal‘s analysis of the action is here (subscription required).
By this action, OPEC is attempting to do its part to maintain oil prices at their highest level in two decades. My sense is that this move may benefit the OPEC members in the short term, but that long term prices will fall from increased exploration and production that will result.

WSJ’s Top Ten Trends in Ten Industries

Yesterday’s Wall Street Journal includes an interesting section (subsciption required) on trends in ten selected industries: Travel, the Internet, Aviation, Professional Sports, Commercial Real Estate, Television, Telecom, Banking, Oil and Gas, and Pharmaceuticals. A subscription to the Journal is expensive, but this type of coverage makes a WSJ subscription a good investment.

When does a recession become a depression?

The thoughtful Daniel Drezner reminds us of the Economist‘s definition of when a recession becomes a depression:

When your neighbour loses his job it?s a slowdown (or, if you dislike him, a correction); when you lose yours, it?s a recession; when an economic journalist loses his, that?s a depression.

Al Qaeda and Iraq

WaPo and the NY Times report on a recently discovered memo requesting more Al Qaeda support for Iraqi insurgent groups. The shadowy ties between Saddam’s Iraq, Al Qaeda, and various other Islamic extremist groups is explored in great detail in Laurie Mylroie’s book, “The War Against America.”

Gore goes over the top

Al Gore‘s increasing irrelevancy was noted in this earlier post. But is this his idea for being taken seriously again?
Word to serious Democratic presidential candidates: Steer clear of this loose cannon.

The Super Bowl of Dog Shows

Having Super Bowl hangover? Check out the Westminster Dog Show this evening on USA Network. The Houston Chronicle reports on the increasingly popular event, which was hilariously depicted in Christopher Guest’s spoof documentary, Best in Show. This is very good dog–and people–watching.