| ENRON v. CONGRESS: AMERICA'S BIGGEST CROOK |
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Subject: ENRON vs CONGRESS
THIS WAS FOUND AT WWW.TOWNHALL.COM by: Walter Williams April 17, 2002 America's biggest crook The Enron case made headlines because fraud and deception of such
magnitude is fairly unusual in the corporate world. Washington fraud
and deception of a much greater magnitude doesn't make the headlines
because fraud and deception in government is standard practice. That's
what's so disgusting when politicians posture and demand that
something be done to ensure honest corporate accounting practices. You
say, "Williams, what are you talking about -- Washington
fraud?" Suppose a company had run up debt that it wanted to
conceal from its stockholders, lenders and the Security Exchange
Commission (SEC). The CEO comes up with the accounting gimmick of
transferring money from its employees' retirement account to the
company's budget account. That way, when auditors come around, the
books are balanced showing no debt. While the company's books are
balanced, the company's debt has not disappeared. It still has debt.
It's just owed to a different group of people: its employees. If a CEO
commits this kind of fraud and deception, he should be summarily
jailed.
Washington politicians have for decades been doing precisely what
Enron has been accused of doing -- concealing debt with accounting
tricks. Congressmen tell us that our Social Security taxes go into a
trust fund to pay for future retirement pensions. That is a boldface
lie. The Social Security trust fund has no money in it. What Congress
does with Social Security trust fund money is buy government bonds.
The purchase of government bonds disguises the deficit by reducing the
national debt.
In essence, here's what happens: Congress takes $100 billion of
Social Security trust fund money to retire government debt, and the
national debt will be $100 billion dollars less. But now the Social
Security system is owed $100 billion dollars.
You say, "Williams, what good does that do them? There's still
$100 billion dollars worth of debt." That's where you're wrong
and where congressional treachery and accounting gimmicks comes in:
Money owed by one government agency to another is not counted as part
of the national debt. Thus, Congress' accounting gimmick is to move
debt from where it's counted (public debt) to where it's not counted
(Social Security debt) -- but it's debt nonetheless.
How will Congress cope with the forthcoming fallout of its crooked
accounting? It will be easy. Congress will simply cheat people out of
their retirement pension by gradually raising the retirement age. For
example, Congress can legislate that 75 years of age, instead of 65,
is when you're eligible for Social Security benefits. Unfortunately,
they can't legislate that you live 10 years longer. That means you
will have been cheated out of 10 years of Social Security checks.
Enron used accounting gimmicks to hide debt and make corporate
executives look good and earn fat bonuses. Congress does the same
thing. Each year, it transfers vast sums of money from the Social
Security and the Federal Highway trust funds to hide debt, and they
boastfully lie to us saying they've not only balanced the budget but
created a surplus.
Corporations employ accounting practices promulgated by the
Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) that established Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). Government accounting practices
don't come close to the honesty of private accounting practices.
But the mystery to me is why Americans are so upset over an
isolated case of a private company using devious accounting gimmicks
and demanding that Congress do something, while we accept without
question the accounting fraud and deception that has become an
inherent feature of government. I'd like to think that it's ignorance
rather than a preference for government dishonesty.
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