' "excessive" corporate reforms" '... I venture a wild guess that means
any accountability which interfers with the bottom line, or the top
line... or the line in the middle, or adversely affects more than one
percent of the nation's CEO's golf handicaps.


Spitzer cautions against easing Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reforms
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/pitt/vLdl/~3/54603130/spitzer-cautions-against-easing.php

 [JURIST] Many of the efforts to soften the corporate accountability
reforms of
the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act <http://www.sec.gov/about/laws/soa2002.pdf>
[PDF
text; SEC materials <http://www.sec.gov/spotlight/sarbanes-oxley.htm>]
are being
pushed by the same corporations that employed questionable accounting and
business practices before the Sarbanes-Oxley reforms, New York state
attorney
general and governor-elect Eliot Spitzer
<http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/currentawareness/spitzer.php> [JURIST news
archive]
said in an interview with the /Financial Times/ published Monday.

Last week, US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
<http://www.treasury.gov/organization/bios/paulson-e.html> [official
profile]
accused Sarbanes-Oxley of raising the cost of doing business in America
<http://www.treasury.gov/press/releases/hp174.htm> [transcript;
Bloomberg report
<http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aD5dgWhMpcqE&refer=home>],
citing declining share sales since 2002 as one example of its impact, and
recommended legislative tweaks to the Act, especially to the internal
control
structure requirements of Section 404
<http://www.kpmg.de/library/pdf/040413_SOX404_PCAOB_Requirements_en.pdf>
[KPMG backgrounder].

Spitzer said Monday that individual corporations are responsible  for
their own poor performances, and that corporate accountability and
ethics will strengthen US markets in the long run.

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act has been an object of criticism since its passage
in the  wake of the Enron debacle and other high-profile corporate
scandals. Rep. Michael Oxley, one of the law's co-sponsors, said last
year that the legislation  was "rushed" and included "excessive"
corporate reforms
<http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/07/sarbanes-oxley-co-author-calls-some.php>

[JURIST report]. A GAO report earlier this year noted that an increasing
number  of small businesses are going private
<http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2006/05/sarbanes-oxley-compliance-costs.php>
[JURIST report] in order to avoid disproportionately higher costs of
complying  with the law, prompting several senators to urge regulators
to find ways to make it less onerous for smaller companies to comply.
The Financial Times has more
<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/a849ea52-7d85-11db-9fa2-0000779e2340.html>.

Reply via email to