|
Greed turns out to be bad business
Paul Krugman
Wednesday, June 5, 2002
Corporate mischief
NEW YORK 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 USA." 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.
.
I am not talking about morality, I am talking about management theory. As
people, corporate leaders are no worse (and no better) than they have 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. Chief executives' salaries were tiny compared with today's lavish
packages. Executives did not 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 is hard to
imagine that such a system ever worked. In fact, during the generation that
followed World War II the U.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 managers' pay should depend strongly on stock prices.
.
In the 1990s, 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. 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.
.
In the long run, reality catches up. 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 serve time? Dishonesty is, hands
down, the best policy.
.
And no, we are 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. Distrust
of corporations now threatens America's tentative economic recovery. It
turns out that greed is bad after all. But what will reform the system?
Washington seems determined to validate the judgment of the quite apolitical
Web site 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 USA?
.
The New York Times |