Oxley says reforms’ effects overblown
Published by megan July 5th, 2007 in SOX, North America, Accounting rules, Sarbox Tags: accounting, arthur andersen, capital markets, collapse, internal financial controls, sarbanes oxley act.Critics of the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley act say the bill’s post-Enron/WorldCom accounting reforms have made U.S. capital markets less competitive with those overseas. It’s no surprise that one of its authors, former U.S. Rep. Michael Oxley, says that’s hardly the case. Oxley says recent refinements to the section of the act requiring companies to monitor internal financial controls and accounting are improvements, but he doesn’t believe SOX, as it’s commonly known, was crippling U.S. businesses.
Oxley was in Houston recently to talk to clients of law firm Baker Hostetler, where he now works in an Of Counsel role.
He talked to the Chronicle’s Tom Fowler about SOX’s legacy, the collapse of Arthur Andersen and why bankers may be more to blame for the high cost of going public.
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