Now that we’re six years into the Great Recession, financial experts tell us that the stock market is booming, and the economy is once again robust. Strangely, the vast majority of Americans aren’t sharing in this so-called recovery and the benefits of it are virtually non-existent, unless you look at the top 0.1% of wage-earners in the country, namely the CEOs of major corporations. Profitability and stock price increases are going through the roof and yet, none of this largesse is filtering down to employees or translating into product innovation or improved quality. How can that be? In an…
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In an opinion piece for The New York Times, M.I.T economics professor, Michael Greenstone, examines the parallels between Enron, the corporate accounting scandals of the early 2000’s and the sub-prime mortgage crisis/Great Recession of present day. Greenstone points out that the biggest similarity and ethical hurdle in both scenarios is the fact that auditors were hired and paid for by the very firms they were being asked to audit. Naturally, this created an enormous conflict of interest on the part of the auditors to present truthful findings, while at the same time, feeling the pressure to please their clients. Although…