Pork Barrel Spending in Corporations is Equally Appalling
To understand the significance of the downturn in the market, check out Sequoia Capital's Powerpoint presentation on Tech Crunch, which contains a quote near the end that reads "spend every dollar like it's your last one." Though this exaggerates the advice that I offer on this site, it's an interesting principle to consider before you open your wallet.
When you, personally, are fronting the bill for an expense, it's easy to say "no" if you feel like you're overpaying or being frivilous. But when your company is going to pay the bill, you're probably less likely to stop yourself, knowing that you can just "expense it."
Employees in come companies legitimately think, because they're traveling for business, that expensive dinners and hotels and plane tickets and car services and luxury retreats are consumables to which they are entitled. Somehow the fact that the company is going to pay the bill excuses them from making financially sound decisions that are in the best interest of the shareholders. The same goes for over-the-top construction, decorating, and other unnecessary eyes-closed, blank-check spending.
Not all companies are guilty; I actually believe that the company I work for does an excellent job of exercising thrift. However, I find it sad that employees in other organizations that expense extravagant happy hours and meals and hotel rooms are doing a horrible disservice to the actual owners of their companies. All employees of a corporation have an indirect fiduciary responsibility to their stockholders, even if that relationship is separated by many degrees.
It's easy for John McCain and Barack Obama to criticise the government for its pork-barrel spending. Americans hate to see their tax dollars wasted. But the truth is that much of our retirement money lives in corporations. Why do we not hold them accountable for their inefficiencies and outrageous spending (does the AIG $400,000 retreat ring a bell?)?
Every time a client is taken to Morton's instead of Panera; every time a consultant stays at the Marriott Marquis instead of the Comfort Inn; every time a quarterly meeting is held in Las Vegas instead of corporate headquarters, the bottom line is knocked down another notch. And the more corporations whose bottom lines are affected, the more affected are those whose retirement accounts are in mutual funds.
My grandmother has her life savings in her IRA, which is losing money like it has holes in its pockets. I understand that frivilous business expenditures aren't the main culprit that got us into the crisis we're in today, but they're his first cousin. I believe that outrageous senses of entitlement and a complete lack reasonable, responsible financial behavior, on behalf of both individuals and corporations, are to blame.
I welcome and encourage your anonymous comments about outrageous corporate spending that you've seen in your career.
When you, personally, are fronting the bill for an expense, it's easy to say "no" if you feel like you're overpaying or being frivilous. But when your company is going to pay the bill, you're probably less likely to stop yourself, knowing that you can just "expense it."
Employees in come companies legitimately think, because they're traveling for business, that expensive dinners and hotels and plane tickets and car services and luxury retreats are consumables to which they are entitled. Somehow the fact that the company is going to pay the bill excuses them from making financially sound decisions that are in the best interest of the shareholders. The same goes for over-the-top construction, decorating, and other unnecessary eyes-closed, blank-check spending.
Not all companies are guilty; I actually believe that the company I work for does an excellent job of exercising thrift. However, I find it sad that employees in other organizations that expense extravagant happy hours and meals and hotel rooms are doing a horrible disservice to the actual owners of their companies. All employees of a corporation have an indirect fiduciary responsibility to their stockholders, even if that relationship is separated by many degrees.
It's easy for John McCain and Barack Obama to criticise the government for its pork-barrel spending. Americans hate to see their tax dollars wasted. But the truth is that much of our retirement money lives in corporations. Why do we not hold them accountable for their inefficiencies and outrageous spending (does the AIG $400,000 retreat ring a bell?)?
Every time a client is taken to Morton's instead of Panera; every time a consultant stays at the Marriott Marquis instead of the Comfort Inn; every time a quarterly meeting is held in Las Vegas instead of corporate headquarters, the bottom line is knocked down another notch. And the more corporations whose bottom lines are affected, the more affected are those whose retirement accounts are in mutual funds.
My grandmother has her life savings in her IRA, which is losing money like it has holes in its pockets. I understand that frivilous business expenditures aren't the main culprit that got us into the crisis we're in today, but they're his first cousin. I believe that outrageous senses of entitlement and a complete lack reasonable, responsible financial behavior, on behalf of both individuals and corporations, are to blame.
I welcome and encourage your anonymous comments about outrageous corporate spending that you've seen in your career.
Labels: corporations, entitlement, fivilous, greed, irresponsible, personal finance, retirement, spending


2 Comments:
At October 10, 2008 10:06 AM ,
Steve said...
While I agree completely about the drain of frivolous business expenses, it is much too easy to just blame greed and irresponsible corporations for the current crisis.
Many of the causes are rooted in decades of federal financial policy, or at least in the unintended consequences of policy. At least to some extent, corporations reacting to or taking advantage of legislation that lets them or encourages them to do some shady business ARE acting in the interest of their shareholders, at least in the short term.
One commentator that I love is Ron Paul, not because I always agree with him, but because (usually) he clearly lays out step by step cause and effect reasons for what the financial world is going through and what is to come. Plus he's a goofy little guy that's fun to listen to. Anyway, case in point:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/09/23/paul.bailout/
Ron Paul put this article out on September 23rd. This is the most unemotional, logical explanation of what's going on and how it came to be that I've been able to find. At least the way Paul puts it, the current crisis is the result of decades of the federal government taking seemingly small steps to bump various markets and keep the economy going - all in good faith, but in short sighted, ultimately damaging ways. I'm sure this short article leaves a lot of important things out, but it illustrates the usefulness of looking back more than 8 years to understand the present.
While things like the second AIG bailout after a 400k party, golden parachutes, and other deeds by corporate scum bags absolutely enrage me, I think it's too easy to fall back on knee-jerk personal moral reactions to find the root causes of the current crisis and figure out how to fix it. Sending corporate assholes to jail would make us all feel good, but it's probably not going to actually improve the situation much.
Calmly reviewing government policy, adjusting it to the best of our current ability, and taking personal responsibility for our personal financial situation is the only way I think we can turn things around in a meaningful way.
Maybe Congress could do a better job of that if they had seating assignments that mixed the parties, and weren't allowed to use the words 'Democrat', 'Republican', or any derivative thereof while in the capitol building or on TV.
Steve
stevescookingjournal.blogspot.com
At October 10, 2008 1:24 PM ,
Steve said...
Some interesting commentaries on the economic crisis:
AP
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yE0xtthIGl8&feature=related
Katur:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S27yitK32ds&feature=related
Ron Paul:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THHji9BhvvM&feature=related
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dv6rQ0U01Yc&feature=related
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