
Smith Hosts Final Lecture in Business
Ethics Series
Instead of being
score-keepers, accountants became
players in the game
-- Dr. Mark Taylor, SEC
The
Business Ethics Lecture Series,
sponsored by the Smith School, hosted
its final speaker, Mark H. Taylor, on
April 19. Taylor, who holds the John P.
Begley Endowed Chair in Accounting at
Creighton University, has a PhD and a
CPA and is an Academic Fellow in the
Office of the Chief Accountant at the
United States Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC). In his hour-long talk,
Taylor focused on the state of the
accounting profession, occupational
fraud, financial statement fraud, the
psychology of fraud, and finally the
role of the SEC.
Taylor began proceedings by providing
a historic context for the role of the
accounting profession. He particularly
highlighted the pioneering role played
by Arthur Andersen in the early part of
the 20th century. Taylor observed that
it was ironic that in his time Arthur
Andersen, the founder of Andersen & Co,
played a pioneering role in ensuring
that the accounting profession remained
a virtuous one where values and ethics
were strongly valued, has become
synonymous with accounting fraud. He
gave the example of how Arthur Andersen
once lost a lucrative DuPont engagement
because he was unwilling to accept
DuPont managements liberal definition of
operating income.
However by the 1970s, the foundation
of accounting ethics and values came
under tremendous pressure. As the audit
market became saturated accounting firms
entered the consulting business. At
first, this did not seem like such a
detrimental trend because auditors by
virtue of their access to a company's
internal condition were often able to
identify and solve company-related
problems better than anyone else.
However, as audits became loss leaders
and accounting firms started getting
increasingly dependent on their
consulting business, the quality of
their audits started deteriorating.
Taylor admitted that we will never
know what exactly happened at Andersen &
Co., but that it was likely the culture
of the firm had changed considerably
since the days of Arthur Andersen
himself. Taylor pointed out that
Andersen & Co, was not the only firm to
have problems, but that the other large
firms too had experienced problems with
litigation associated with performing
audits. It was at this time that the
accounting profession lost sight of its
main goal, its raison detre which was to
secure the public interest. Instead of
being score-keepers, accountants became
players in the game, Taylor said.
Whereas once accountants were
synonymous with probity; in recent times
public opinion polls suggest that the
accounting profession became viewed with
some distrust in the early part of the
current decade. There was a recent
crisis in the accounting profession. And
the central piece of the puzzle is
ethics, Taylor said.
Taylor then illustrated with several
interesting and interactive case
examples, instances of occupational and
financial statement fraud. He also cited
studies that revealed the number of
companies which had experienced fraud
rose between 1998 and 2003. Furthermore,
it was the small companies which were
most vulnerable. By some estimates fraud
is costing the U.S. economy up to $600
billion annually.
The next section of Taylors talk
focused on the psychological profile of
people committing fraud. He surprised
the large audience by pointing out that
the psychological profiling of fraud
perpetrators shows that they appear to
be upstanding citizens and team players.
Studies also show that they rarely stop
after committing a single fraud. Also,
if they believe that they may get caught
then they are unlikely to do it, thus
further underscoring the need for
visibly tight vigilance.
Taylor then described the fraud
triangle pressure, rationalizing and
opportunity. Employees who were under
extreme financial or other kinds of
pressure were more likely to commit
fraud. Furthermore, rationalization is
very common among fraud perpetrators;
because if they are unable to
rationalize then they feel tremendous
guilt. He told the audience that, Under
the right set of circumstances, anyone
could become a fraud perpetrator. Thus,
the last wall of defense is your
personal moral code.
Taylor concluded his talk by
discussing the crucial role that the SEC
plays in combating fraud. He said that
although the accounting profession has
suffered a major crisis of confidence in
recent times, today it is on the path to
recovery.
▓ Smith Media Group, Sachin Agarwal,
MBA Candidate 2007
» More spring
2006 Ethics Lecture Series highlights
> Read about Smith's fall 2005 ethics
lecture series.
> Read about Smith's spring 2005 ethics
lecture series.