YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :WorldCom Enron and Ethics
Essays 31 - 60
2005). The result would be an increase in the current years EBIDTA (Scharff, 2005). The line costs, in fact, were the main ...
million in order to settle claims when it defrauded the General Services Administration (GSA) (2004). That occurred between 1999 ...
religious ideology) and the various "sciences" of business (Parker S27). Quite often these arguments have attempted to negate the ...
the market to the scope and scale of the scandal, but the way in which it impacted on individuals personally and received a great ...
to find that the market was quickly glutted and could not sustain itself; the infamous "dot com boom" around the turn of the mille...
In six pages a SWOT analysis is performed on this telecommunications merger. Eleven sources are cited in the bibliography....
corporate governance has become an issue of regulation as seen with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 in the US which indicate the in...
billions of dollars below expectations, the bottom fell out. The stock was dumped, and it lost value. The stock has lost 99 percen...
explained that controlling has no relationship to authoritarian leadership styles, it is about controlling things such as resource...
its only when they get caught with their hands in the cookie jar, so to speak, that suddenly there is the desire to become better....
see fit, in spite of how their selfish actions may cause harm or damage to others. Indeed, this is precisely the essence of socia...
business, but it has "confused some employees spiritually -- a side often overlooked by vitally important to an ethical workplace"...
benefit from various government subsidies, it also cheated millions of shareholders using questionable accounting practices design...
those who were relying on the company for pensions, directly or indirectly, those who worked for them, and those who worked for co...
(Sun, 2006). The author remarks that internal auditors now have rock star status (Sun, 2006). Clearly, auditors are revered and ha...
Innovation and risk taking - willing to experiment, take risks, encourage innovation (Smith, 2004). 2. Attention to detail - payin...
White collar fraud continues to be committed. Most people are well-aware of some of the huge corporate scandals, like Enron, the t...
accounting system it may be argued that a collapse in the style of Enron is much more unlikely due to very different accounting en...
company that essentially is a member of the walking dead, it paradoxically experienced a rise in revenues for the nine months ende...
(Fixmer, 2002). Network security. By 2002, there had been few lawsuits in this area, but even then it was recognized as on...
Compounding these problems was the work of Jeffrey Skilling. His duties should have included overseeing and regulating various dep...
made available to all of the outside world including Wall Street analysts. The news of its financial problems came as a surprise ...
Coffees theory is that the legal climate for investment fraud sharply declined throughout the 1990s (allowing everyone to look the...
quality audits and staff - the company valued the quality audits more than short-term profits (Brickley et al, 2006). During the e...
this was not a positive culture for building teamwork, collaboration or conflict management skills. Clearly, Enron has pro...
as was dishonesty and shady deals (Thomas, 2002). Out of fear for being shown the door because of the PRC, in other words,...
behavior incorporates theories from a number of other fields, including psychology, anthropology, sociology, social psychology and...
between Enrons accounting statements and the fiscal reality of the institutions assets and obligations. One might view the major f...
five" have been working to impose US accounting convention on other developed nations of the world, Andersen has been committing l...
decided to trade bandwidth as a commodity just as it was trading gas and electricity (Leonard, 2001). The corporations investments...