New revelations
concerning wrongdoings at Enron seem to surface every day, and
the scandal took a tragic turn last week with the suicide of a
top Enron executive. In Washington, Congress has been scrambling
to assemble hearings that will make various members look properly
outraged and committed to reform. The popular media and some politicians
want to portray Enron as a reckless company whose problems stemmed
from a lack of federal oversight. Already legislation has been
introduced to force all publicly traded companies to submit to
federal audits.
In truth,
however, the problem was not the lack of government involvement
with Enron, but rather the close relationship between Enron
and government. Enron in fact was deeply involved with the federal
government throughout the 1990s, both through its lobbying efforts
and as a recipient of large amounts of corporate welfare.
Enron provides
a perfect example of the dangers of corporate subsidies. The company
was (and is) one of the biggest beneficiaries of Export-Import
Bank subsidies. The Ex-Im bank, a program that Congress continues
to fund with your tax dollars, essentially makes risky loans to
foreign governments and businesses for projects involving American
companies. The Bank, which purports to help developing nations,
really acts as a naked subsidy for certain politically-favored
American corporations- especially corporations like Enron that
lobbied hard and gave huge amounts of cash to both political parties.
Its reward was more that $600 million in cash via six different
Ex-Im financed projects.
One such
project, a power plant in India, played a big part in Enron's
demise. The company had trouble selling the power to local officials,
adding to its huge $618 million loss for the third quarter of
2001. Former president Clinton worked hard to secure the India
deal for Enron in the mid-90s; not surprisingly, his 1996 campaign
received $100,000 from the company. Yet the media makes no mention
of this favoritism. Clinton may claim he was "protecting" tax
dollars, but those tax dollars should never have been sent to
India in the first place.
Enron similarly
benefitted from another federal boondoggle, the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation. OPIC operates much like the Ex-Im Bank,
providing taxpayer-funded loan guarantees for overseas projects,
often in countries with shaky governments and economies. An OPIC
spokesman claims the organization paid more than one billion dollars
for 12 projects involving Enron, dollars that now may never be
repaid. Once again, corporate welfare benefits certain interests
at the expense of taxpayers.
The point
is that Enron was intimately involved with the federal government.
While most in Washington are busy devising ways to "save" investors
with more government, we should be viewing the Enron mess as an
argument for less government. It is precisely because government
is so big and so thoroughly involved in every aspect of business
that Enron felt the need to seek influence through campaign money.
It is precisely because corporate welfare is so extensive that
Enron cozied up to Congress and the Clinton administration. It's
a game every big corporation plays in our heavily regulated economy,
because they must when the government, rather than the marketplace,
distributes the spoils.
This
does not mean Enron is to be excused. There seems to be little
question that executives at Enron deceived employees and investors,
and any fraudulent conduct should of course be fully prosecuted.
Yet we should not allow criminal fraud in one company, which constitutionally
is a matter for state law, to justify the imposition of burdensome
new accounting and stock regulations. We certainly should not
allow the Enron collapse to be characterized as a failure of capitalism
or free markets, because the opposite is true. The Enron collapse
provides an example of how government does so much to prevent
the market from working properly in the first place.