Give The SEC Its Due: More Money - 10/29/2002

Home

Index of Filings

News and Press Releases

Filings

Decisions

Settlements

Litigation Activity Indices

Top Ten List

Annual/Quarterly Updates

Clearinghouse Research

Articles & Papers

Search

Related Sites

About Us

Local Rules

Sponsors


Register


_______________
Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2002 News and Press Releases

News News 2002


HEADLINE ARCHIVED:

Give The SEC Its Due: More Money
By: Joseph A. Grundfest


The Wall Street Journal. October 29, 2002

_________________________________________________________________________

EXCERPT: It's budget season and every agency has a story. The FBI, the CIA, and the military all need more resources to respond to mushrooming security concerns. So it's easy to understand how a knife-wielding budgetmeister might decide to carve back the $776 million Securities and Exchange Commission authorization contained in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. That's what happened recently, when the administration proposed a budget of $568 million, freeing up $208 million to be spent elsewhere. --- The administration might respond to critics by pointing out that its proposal is $130 million more than the SEC's current budget. Few agencies are getting 30% budget increases these days. But the administration will likely discover that if it prevails, it will have saved itself a very expensive $208 million. The $776 million budget figure wasn't pulled out of thin air. The number was an essential part of the legislative bargain. The additional funding was intended to help prevent and punish fraudulent behavior through monitoring and oversight. Punishment requires more litigators with the wherewithal to go to the mat against some of the biggest, smartest law firms representing defendants in SEC proceedings. The funding was also intended to provide investors with timely access to public filings, reduce compliance costs for public companies, and help start up a new accounting oversight board. It's clear that $568 million will prove insufficient. The proposal also creates credibility problems for the administration. What happens when Congress next considers a bill containing similar budgetary commitments? The White House signed off on Sarbanes-Oxley on July 30. Now, only 80 days later, it's backing away dramatically from its budgetary commitment. Who's to say similar episodes won't recur? You can already hear the choruses of "Remember Sarbanes-Oxley" on the floor of Congress. On a practical level, the cut will also exacerbate an enforcement vacuum in our nation's capital markets at the worst time. The SEC lacks the resources it needs to prosecute all instances of major fraud. Nature may abhor a vacuum, but state attorneys general and trial lawyers love one. The decision to starve the SEC only empowers this brigade of alternative enforcers. Do we really think they'd do as effective a job as a well-funded SEC? Not by a long shot. Also, if this budgetary backtracking is driven by fear that a bulked-up SEC will impose substantial compliance costs on the private sector, the administration should recognize that history teaches the opposite is true. It's when the agency is politically weak and its resources stretched thin that it strives to compensate by imposing inefficient compliance and litigation burdens on corporations and investors. In contrast, a well-funded agency doesn't have to prove its mettle by pursuing questionable lawsuits or adopting overbearing regulations. Today's weak SEC is a prescription for disaster for Wall Street and Main Street alike.

Back to News page | Back to Archived News 2002 page | Back to Top