"Enron" Essays and Research Papers

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    Considering all of these factors it is feasible to see why a cutthroat mentality is needed and sometimes used for business. However‚ this cutthroat mentality is the reason why organizations are no longer fully trusted. With decisions and actions made by Enron‚ Arthur Andersen‚ and Bernard Madoff‚ how are consumers and the public supposed to fully give their trust to something or someone. Recently organizations were looking for a way to create a positive public image‚ improve employee retention and moral

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    REPORT ‘Why Financial Reports can never really be considered neutral (free from bias) or objective.’ Word Count: 2536 Introduction The Framework for the preparation and presentation of financial statements specifies that information generated should “represent faithfully” and “be neutral… free from bias” (AASB Framework‚ para. 33; 36). Information that is not neutral can “influence the making of a decision or judgement in order to achieve a predetermined result or outcome” (AASB Framework

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    Ethics and Auditing

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    of accounting practices. The fact that financial accounting originated and functioned strictly on a rule basis provided an opportunity for people to bend the rules and get away with illegal actions including the infamous scandals associated with Enron‚ Arthur Andersen‚ Martha Stewart‚ etc. Many accountants rely heavily on rules‚ even when it is clearly not the right or moral course of action. Although‚ it is good to follow rules‚ people tend to abuse rules

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    Certificate of Authenticity

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    Abstract This paper explores a few key characteristics of an authentic leader. In the beginning it describes the difference between leadership styles and actually being authentic. Ex-Enron CEO Kenneth Lay‚ before his conviction portrayed himself as an authentic leader. After his conviction it was evident that there wasn‟t any authentic intention behind his decision making. The purpose of paper is to show how authentic leaders govern themselves in the workplace. This document provides an explanation

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    Corporate Transparency vs. Business Performance Throughout history‚ mankind has had innumerable moments of corruption and greed. From the City-State wars in ancient Greece to the organized crime during the prohibition‚ human beings have always been prey to the desires of wealth and power. While our current society may seem civilized compared to those eras‚ the shallow traits which haunted mankind then are still in play in today’s society. There are always going to be people looking for a way to

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    English research proposal

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    Introduction Its fall of 2001 and you are an employee for Enron‚ one of the largest energy companies in the world at the time. As an employee you have the option of owning stock in it and you also have a retirement plan with Enron. But what you don’t know is that Enron has been committing accounting fraud for a while now and Enron’s stocks aren’t really worth $90 and that they are soon going to file for bankruptcy. The executives haven’t told you this because if they told you the truth‚ you would

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    Arthur Andersen

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    However‚ the risky and unethical decisions that were made over the ending years by top management‚ gave Arthur Andersen a famous name with not such a positive reputation. Arthur Andersen became involved in many scandals with the largest being that of Enron Incorporated. Poor decision making by upper management and issues with ethics caused a rapid decline in the firm’s reputation. “Arthur Andersen himself originally built his business by putting reputation over profit” (Brown‚ K. & Dugan‚ I.‚ 2002

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    management team went through the books. Motivation seems to be that this publicly traded company needed to keep stock prices up to keep investors and shareholders happy. Incentive‚ opportunity and rationalization are all at play here. The Enron Scandal in 2001. Enron was inflating its income by $586 million. Thousands of employees and investors lost their retirement accounts. Thousands

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    that had shaken the whole business world. The crash of Enron in US‚ followed by worldwide collapse of its auditor‚ Arthur Andersen. It was a greatest corporate failure uncovered in business history. Follow the Enron-Andersen scandal‚ massive organizations like WorldCom‚ Xerox and Waste Management confront a similar fate. The debate rested on the issue of audit independence ‚ that is found to be one of the major contributors to crashes like Enron. It is explained that the impact of lack of audit independence

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    Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

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    also known as the Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act of 2002‚ is a federal law enacted in response to corporate and accounting scandals that led to bankruptcies and severe stock losses. Corrupt corporations‚ particularly Enron‚ WorldCom and Tyco‚ were acting unethical by committing accounting errors and fraudulent practices by management which led to scandals in 2001. The scandals impacted investors‚ who lost billions of dollars when the stock prices plummeted‚ and the public

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