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Mises Economics Blog

Sarbanes-Oxley Turned Auditors into Government Agents

June 20, 2005 11:32 AM by J. Henderson | Other posts by J. Henderson | Comments (4)

A survey of public companies finds that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has poisoned business relationships between companies and auditing firms. According to company comments, the auditing firms have been transformed into de facto agents of the government. “Public company auditors are now privatized regulators for the Securities and Exchange Commission.� While SOX allows auditors to harass their clients with IRS-like powers, it also enables them to charge premium fees. Chicago law firm Foley & Lardner found that average audit fees for small public companies zoomed 96% to $1 million in 2004. Smaller companies report that lost productivity costs due to SOX compliance soared 556% $1.1 million in 2004.

Comments (4)

  • Michael Hartl
  • The Financial Times article is subscription only. :-(

  • Published: June 20, 2005 1:26 PM

  • J Henderson
  • The FT requires registration only to view this item.

  • Published: June 21, 2005 6:33 AM

  • Paul Edwards
  • Yuk. What is worse and scarier than government regulation and intervention? Government regulation and intervention implemented by private enterprise. Destruction implemented efficiently.

  • Published: June 21, 2005 6:46 PM

  • Phillip
  • good point mr edwards, at least with bureaucrats harassing you, you can count on inefficiency.

  • Published: June 22, 2005 12:37 PM

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