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Unity Platform on Corporate Accountability
As concerned individuals and peoples' organizations representing
workers, environmentalists, consumers and citizens across the U.S. and
around the world, we are responding to the collapse of Enron by calling
for a fundamental transformation of the relationship between corporations
and society.
We are outraged by the way that Enron ran roughshod over
ordinary people around the world. It manipulated energy markets to hike
up rates that devastated working people and senior citizens in the United
States and other nations. It evaded taxes in ways that enriched executives.
It bought and sold politicians and attempted to write our nation's energy
policy. Its executives made millions while it deceived and impoverished
its own workers and countless people who owned its stock. It used taxpayer
money to expand overseas in ways that hurt people, abused human rights,
and despoiled the environment. And, even more damaging, many of Enron's
activities have been copied by other firms all over the world.
The Enron
debacle marks a defining moment regarding the nature and role of the corporation
in society. During the 20th century, there were at least three political
moments in the US where significant efforts were made to reign-in corporate
power -- the movement to curb corporate mergers through anti-trust laws
at the onset of the last century; the rise of the labor movement and the
regulatory state as a counter-balance to corporate power in the 1930s;
and the creation of a broad range of consumer, environmental and labor
regulations in the late 1960's and 1970s.
As the 21st century begins to
unfold, it is all too clear that these measures have had only a marginal
effect on reining-in corporate power, largely because they neglected to
define corporations as entities subservient to a sovereign people. What
the Enron scandal does is provide a political moment to rethink and remake
the role of the 'corporation' and of 'democracy,' not just in the U.S.,
but, necessarily, throughout the world.
To move in this direction, we
propose the following 11-point platform as a common base for unity and
action:
- Separate the Corporation & the State
The Enron case shows how deeply entrenched corporations have become
in shaping political life in the U.S. and other countries. Enron's political
campaign contributions covered the landscape of Washington, D.C.'s politicians,
from the President to most members of the Senate and House of Representatives.
The company's influence over numerous state-level governments was equally
pervasive. Enron's Board of Directors also contained well- placed political
figures and several past and present members of President Bush's Cabinet
have been on Enron's payroll. Meanwhile, Enron has been a key player
in some of the strongest political lobby machines, including the U.S.
Coalition of Service Industries, the National Foreign Trade Council
and the U.S. Council for International Business. And Enron is just one
company; the unmitigated influence that corporations have over the legislative
and regulatory system in the U.S. and other countries derives from their
financial might and their political rights under law (such as free speech
and property protections as corporate persons) and has not changed since
Enron's collapse. The result is that while modest campaign finance reforms
have been enacted in the wake of the Enron debacle, it is not at all
sufficient and there have been few other significant reforms. We,
therefore, call for a separation of the corporation and the state. This
would include the phase-out of big business financing of electoral campaigns,
the development of a public financing plan for elections in the future,
restrictions designed to slow down and stop the 'revolving door' of
personnel moving between corporations and governments --- plus similar
measures separating corporations and the state in global institutions
like the World Trade Organization, World Bank, International Monetary
Fund and the United Nations.
- Re-regulate
Utility Markets
It is well known that Enron played a pivotal role in bringing about
the deregulation of electricity in California that, in turn, provoked
an energy crisis in that State. By exerting political influence over
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Enron was able to effectively
remove government oversight of its own trading and marketing practices.
Rather than putting priority on producing electricity through its power
plants, Enron was allowed to speculate on electricity contracts. By
manipulating both prices and supply of electricity, Enron was able to
gouge consumers in California and reap billions of dollars in revenues
and profits. Despite the California fiasco, the Bush Administration
has gone ahead with the wholesale deregulation of energy utility markets
and promoting the construction of a flurry of new power plants throughout
the country. We, therefore, insist that concerted steps be taken
to restore public ownership of vital services such as energy and water
through such means as the municipalization of electric utilities. Most
importantly, energy policies must be changed to favor conservation and
renewable sources of energy.
- Redefine Financial
Accountability
It is now clear that Enron's accountants, Arthur Andersen Inc., were
caught cooking the corporation's books to provide a false report of
debts and profits, and have played a role in corrupting the accounting
profession in the process. They were also found shredding financial
records. Today, accounting firms like Andersen tend to lose their independence
by providing both accounting and consulting services to the same corporate
clients, thereby creating conflicts of interest. What's more, full public
disclosure of a corporation's finances is not possible as long as companies
are not required to account for the social and environmental costs of
their operations. We, therefore, call for the enactment of new rules
governing the accounting industry, including: stronger oversight measures
by the Securities Exchange Commission, such as publicly-administered
audits; criminal penalties on culpable companies and their personnel
for false reporting; separation of accounting and consulting practices;
and full cost accounting of social and environmental impacts in financial
reports.
- Make corporations pay their proper share of taxes.
The global race to the bottom has established a pitting of countries
against each other to further reduce corporate taxes as the price of
keeping companies from fleeing. After the 2002 tax cuts, U.S. corporations
will pay close to the lowest rate of taxes as a share of the economy
that they have paid in 60 years. Nevertheless, many U.S. corporations
are shifting their headquarters to nominal mail-drop locations in tax
haven countries in order to further reduce or avoid paying taxes. Enron
set up over 800 subsidiaries in offshore tax havens to fraudulently
hide its debt and reduce its tax payments. The company also deducted
billions of dollars of stock option gains and used other techniques
to avoid paying taxes entirely in four of the last five years before
it filed for bankruptcy. We call for a reversal in the trend towards
corporate tax avoidance. U.S. corporations should pay the equivalent
of what they paid in the 1950s (4.5 percent of the U.S. GDP during the
Truman and Eisenhower years versus 1.3 percent after the 2002 cuts).
Congress needs to end international tax dodges, like offshore reincorporation.
Local, state and federal governments also need to end the many forms
of corporate tax welfare that come in the form of subsidies, loopholes
and escapes (e.g. accelerated depreciation for oil, mining and gas).
Further, it is time to establish new forms of taxation (e.g. the Tobin
Tax) to reduce the incentives for excessive speculation.
- Establish
and Strengthen Legal Liability
The Enron scandal shows what happens
when, with the help of members of the legal profession, publicly traded
corporations acquire, under the law, special rights and protections
which effectively put them, beyond the reach of other laws and liabilities
to which ordinary citizens are subject. In effect, the CEO, officers
and shareholders of a corporation like Enron enjoy virtual immunity
when it comes to legal responsibilities for harms committed against
workers, communities or the environment. As a result, Enron's management,
officers and major shareholders may be immune from prosecution for the
company's actions ranging from consumer price-gouging in California
and manipulation of their workers' pension fund investments to the repression
of human rights in India or environmental destruction in Bolivia. We,
therefore, insist that the civil and criminal liability of a corporation's
top management and directors be legally established or strengthened
for corporate wrongdoing, both in terms of the company's domestic and
overseas operations.
- Strengthen Labor Rights and Environmental Obligations
Enron's own track record regarding labor and the environment shows the
urgent need to establish a new set of legal obligations for corporations,
including a new set of rights for workers on the job. Enron's record
on workers' rights, ranging from its job-slashing practices after company
takeovers to its manipulation of the 401-k pension funds of its workers,
has been appalling. So, too, with Enron's environmental track record,
for example, in regards to nitrogen oxide emissions from its methanol
plants. We, therefore, call strengthened whistleblower protections,
respect for independent worker organizations and an end to the routine
violation of labor rights in the U.S. and around the world. Employees
should have the freedom of speech and association, as well as other
rights of protection on the job. As institutions that are distinct from
natural persons, corporations should not be protected by Fourth Amendment
rights, which in the past have been used to protect them from unannounced
inspections by EPA and OSHA. In addition, the framework for environmental
regulation must be shifted from the current command-and-control model
to one that favors the use of the precautionary principle. Finally,
corporations should be subject to much stronger disclosure obligations.
- Make Overseas Operations More Accountable
Enron's operations in other
countries, especially in the developing countries of the South, raises
serious questions about how to effectively monitor and enforce obligations
on U.S. corporations abroad. In India, for example, when villagers protested
against Enron's investment in the Dabhol Power Plant which threatens
local livelihoods and the environment, the company paid state government
security forces to crack down on the dissenters, using brutal tactics.
In Bolivia, Enron is the key player in the construction of a gas pipeline
across the only protected area for the world's largest, intact, dry
forest area. In both cases, Enron used the offices of the U.S. Trade
Representative and the National Security Council in dealing with the
Indian and Bolivian governments. Yet, this is common practice for many
U.S. corporations in their overseas operations. We, therefore, insist
that U.S. corporations adhere to U.S. environmental and labor standards
in their overseas operations and that they be held liable in U.S. court
for any civil or criminal violation of such standards. Corporations
should also be bound by international human rights law and subject to
sanctions for violations in U.S. courts. In addition, corporations should
be bound by an international code of conduct which requires them, among
other things, to disclose key information to the public about their
environmental, labor, and human rights practices from their operations
around the world. Meanwhile, new national laws should be established
requiring that U.S. corporations meet certain social obligations in
their overseas operations. We also call on the UN Human Rights Commission
to establish a Special Rapporteur to investigate Enron's global practices
and to make recommendations on how corporations can be held accountable
globally.
- Eliminate International Corporate Welfare
To expand its
international operations, Enron received over $7 billion in government
assistance from the U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation [OPIC]
and other public sources, including the World Bank and other multilateral
financial institutions. Yet, Enron is by no means the only profitable
multinational corporation on state welfare roles today. We, therefore,
call for the elimination of the OPIC, and the World Bank's private-sector
lending arm (IFC) and insurance guarantee agency (MIGA), and the fundamental
restructuring of the ExIm Bank and other public agencies.
- Control
Speculative Investment
The Enron story also reveals how corporations,
fueled by their investment banking partners, are channeling more and
more capital into speculative investments and away from the production
of goods and services. The deregulation of financial services has pulled
down the firewalls that protected investors from the dangers of speculation
while increasing the use of certain kinds of unregulated securities,
such as derivatives. With their compensation increasingly tied to short-term
stock performance and the disbursement of stock options, corporate executives
have increasingly bet the company store on speculative ventures that
conflict with the long-term interests of their own employees and shareholders.
Meanwhile, Wall Street banks themselves have underwritten many dubious
ventures involving speculative investments while puffing up the value
of the companies' stock to unsuspecting investors through their own
analysts' unwarranted boosterism. We, therefore, call for a transaction
tax to deter speculation and raise revenues for the protection of consumers,
children, public health and the environment. In addition, regulatory
changes are necessary to make financial markets more stable and transparent,
including capital requirements on derivatives dealers, collateral requirements
on transactions, and registration and reporting requirements for over-the-counter
derivatives. Countries must also be free to maintain capital controls
and limits and regulations on capital flows. In addition, government-backed
guarantees for bank loans to corporations for speculative kinds of investment
must be eliminated.
- Renegotiate Trade Rules
The Enron story further
demonstrates how global trade rules are being designed as tools for
corporations to pry open markets in public services, such as electricity
and water, on a for-profit basis. As a multi-sector service corporation
with powerful connections in Congress and the White House, Enron positioned
itself to play a major role in writing new global rules for cross-border
trade in services through the GATS negotiations [the General Agreement
on Trade and Services]. Once these negotiations are completed, the new
GATS rules will come into effect and be enforced by binding mechanisms
in both the World Trade Organization and the Free Trade Area of the
Americas. We, therefore, call for a halt to the negotiations for WTO
expansion and the FTAA. In place of negotiations to facilitate corporate
globalization, countries should negotiate a convention on corporate
accountability with binding enforcement powers.
- Overhaul Corporate
Governance
Finally, the Enron debacle illustrates how distorted the corporate model
of governance itself has become, wherein all authority and accountability
resides with the chief executive officer, directors, and major shareholders,
and the only purpose of a corporation is the pursuit of profit. A corporation
is composed of many stakeholders besides its senior management and major
investors, including its workers, customers, suppliers, creditors and
the communities in which it operates. Yet, these other stakeholders
are excluded from the model of governance that prevails today. We,
therefore, insist on the need for an overhaul of corporate governance
laws, concerning both publicly and privately held corporations, to ensure
that all the main stakeholders of a corporation including its
minor shareholders, workers, community, and customers are represented
in the exercise of authority and accountability with regards to decisions
affecting the company's operations. The sovereignty of people over corporations
should be established by a periodic review and, if necessary, revocation
of corporate charters the basic instruments of their creation
by the governments which grant them.
In our efforts to build a better world, we hereby pledge
ourselves to vigorously promote this common plan of action as an antidote
to the systemic concentrated greed, power and control by enveloping corporate
power that is relentlessly eroding our future as democratic societies
under the sovereignty of their people.
See the list of organizations
signed on in support of the Unity Platform.
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