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The Sarbanes-Oxley Debacle
The Sarbanes-Oxley Debacle |
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The Sarbanes-Oxley DebacleWhat We've Learned; How to Fix It By Henry N. Butler, Larry E. Ribstein AEI Press , June 2006
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX) is a
colossal failure, poorly conceived and hastily enacted during a
regulatory panic. Evidence suggests that the market has estimated that
SOX will impose huge indirect costs on top of substantial direct costs.
A largely overlooked concern is the act potential to turn into a
litigation time bomb: the first major market correction will likely
become a feast for trial lawyers.
PDFs: Table of Contents , Introduction , Chapter 7 , Chapter 8 , Conclusion
SOX defenders assert that the business world is better off now than before SOX, but the relevant question is whether it is better because of SOX. Existing institutions could have responded to any problems without a vast one-size-fits-all regulation from the federal government.
SOX should be repealed, but failing that,
there is some hope that a recent lawsuit could provide the leverage to
enact at least some major changes. The economic costs of SOX could be
greatly reduced by prohibiting private lawsuits based on SOX, exempting
all but the largest domestic corporations and dual-listed securities of
foreign corporations, and clarifying and reducing the requirements of
SOX controversial internal controls disclosure requirement. The
post-SOX era offers opportunities to assess soberly what we have
learned about policymaking from the SOX fiasco. There is much to be
said for careful regulation that recognizes legislators inherent
limitations in reforming corporate governance. The Sarbanes-Oxley Debacle seeks to salvage some lessons from the ruins of SOX.
The AEI Liability Studies examine aspects of the U.S. civil
liability system central to the political debates over liability
reform. The goal of the series is to contribute new empirical evidence
and promising reform ideas that are commensurate to the seriousness of
America liability problems.
Henry N. Butler is the James Farley Professor of Economics, Argyros School of Business and Economics, Chapman University. Larry E. Ribstein is the Richard and Marie Corman Professor of Law, University of Illinois College of Law.
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