[Jim Devine, did PK ever take an ethics class? Or a political theory
class? Has he ever *worked* in a Fortune 500 firm?]

June 4, 2002
Greed Is Bad
By PAUL KRUGMAN


The point is, ladies and gentlemen, greed is good. Greed works, greed is
right. . . . and greed, mark my words, will save not only Teldar Paper
but the other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A."

Gordon Gekko, the corporate raider who gave that speech in the 1987
movie "Wall Street," got his comeuppance; but in real life his
philosophy came to dominate corporate practice. And that is the
backstory of the wave of scandal now engulfing American business.

Let me be clear: I'm not talking about morality, I'm talking about
management theory. As people, corporate leaders are no worse (and no
better) than they've always been. What changed were the incentives.

Twenty-five years ago, American corporations bore little resemblance to
today's hard-nosed institutions. Indeed, by modern standards they were
Socialist republics. C.E.O. salaries were tiny compared with today's
lavish packages. Executives didn't focus single-mindedly on maximizing
stock prices; they thought of themselves as serving multiple
constituencies, including their employees. The quintessential pre-Gekko
corporation was known internally as Generous Motors.

These days we are so steeped in greed-is-good ideology that it's hard to
imagine that such a system ever worked. In fact, during the generation
that followed World War II the nation's standard of living doubled. But
then, growth faltered - and the corporate raiders arrived.

The raiders claimed - usually correctly - that they could increase
profits, and hence stock prices, by inducing companies to get leaner and
meaner. By replacing much of a company's stock with debt, they forced
management to shape up or go bankrupt. At the same time, by giving
executives a large personal stake in the company's stock price, they
induced them to do whatever it took to drive that price higher.

All of this made sense to professors of corporate finance. Gekko's
speech was practically a textbook exposition of "principal-agent"
theory, which says that managers' pay should depend strongly on stock
prices: "Today management has no stake in the company. Together the men
sitting here [the top executives] own less than 3 percent of the
company."

And in the 1990's corporations put that theory into practice. The
predators faded from the scene, because they were no longer needed;
corporate America embraced its inner Gekko. Or as Steven Kaplan of the
University of Chicago's business school put it - approvingly - in 1998:
"We are all Henry Kravis now." The new tough-mindedness was enforced,
above all, with executive pay packages that offered princely rewards if
stock prices rose.

And until just a few months ago we thought it was working.

Now, as each day seems to bring a new business scandal, we can see the
theory's fatal flaw: a system that lavishly rewards executives for
success tempts those executives, who control much of the information
available to outsiders, to fabricate the appearance of success.
Aggressive accounting, fictitious transactions that inflate sales,
whatever it takes.

It's true that in the long run reality catches up with you. But a few
years of illusory achievement can leave an executive immensely wealthy.
Ken Lay, Gary Winnick, Chuck Watson, Dennis Kozlowski - all will be
consoled in their early retirement by nine-figure nest eggs. Unless you
go to jail - and does anyone think any of our modern malefactors of
great wealth will actually do time? - dishonesty is, hands down, the
best policy.

And no, we're not talking about a few bad apples. Statistics for the
last five years show a dramatic divergence between the profits companies
reported to investors and other measures of profit growth; this is clear
evidence that many, perhaps most, large companies were fudging their
numbers.

Now, distrust of corporations threatens our still-tentative economic
recovery; it turns out greed is bad, after all. But what will reform our
system? Washington seems determined to validate the judgment of the
quite apolitical Web site of Corporate Governance (corpgov.net), which
matter-of-factly remarks, "Given the power of corporate lobbyists,
government control often equates to de facto corporate control anyway."

Perhaps corporations will reform themselves, but so far they show no
signs of changing their ways. And you have to wonder: Who will save that
malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A.?

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