Wall Street Journal analyses the plan:

As early as today, Pennsylvania Democrat Paul Kanjorski plans to introduce an amendment that would apply the most onerous Sarbanes-Oxley regulations to the smallest public companies. Supported by House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, this amendment to the financial re-regulation bill now moving through the House would inflict millions of dollars in compliance costs upon thousands of companies.

Those companies will still be audited, of course. But Sarbox would subject them to the double whammy that big companies have had to live with at enormous expense—and with no noticeable decline in business fraud. Unable to stop regulatory relief in his own committee, Mr. Frank now believes he can rally enough Democrats to kill it on the floor.

Yesterday, Mr. Obama reminded his audience at the Brookings Institution that small businesses are the “companies that drive innovation, producing 13 times more patents per employee than large companies. And it’s worth remembering, every once in a while a small business becomes a big business—and changes the world.” However, this is happening less and less frequently, due in no small measure to Sarbox.

Every day it feels more like they are purposely trying to destroy the economy.




  1. SparkyOne says:

    Oh shit. No recovery here.

  2. Griffy says:

    JCD’s head’s gonna blow.

  3. mrvco says:

    Wow… what problem are they trying to solve exactly?

  4. Ah_Yea says:

    It’s called NEW TAXES.

    And yes, small businesses won’t be able to handle it. So they either will go out of business or move even more manufacturing to another country.

    It’s destructive and idiotic.

    I wonder what the Obamapologist like Dallas would say?

  5. sargasso says:

    I wonder, which part of; auditor independence, corporate governance, internal control assessment, and enhanced financial disclosure – does Ron Paul object to?

  6. me says:

    Ok, first of all, its an opinion piece in WSJ, which doesn’t exactly have a track record of independent balanced analysis.

    Second, many seem to have missed the term “public” companies. These are not mom and pop operations, but publicly traded companies.

    As far as judging companies by their patents, then patent trolls ought to be the most productive companies on the planet. Lets face it, the patent system is broken, but that’s another topic.

  7. Thomas says:

    It will never pass. SOX is already onerous for large corporations. It would bring small corps to their knees. You cannot expect a one or two person operation to be able to comply with SOX.

  8. a says:

    … anybody that can economically compete or oppose the government …

    Name that anybody that can do it now.

  9. Troublemaker says:

    a said, on December 9th, 2009 at 12:19 pm

    Name that anybody that can do it now.

    Goldman Sachs?

  10. SparkyOne says:

    # 10 Troublemaker,
    Wrong, Goldman Sachs does not compete directly nor oppose the US government. They fucking own it…

  11. Faxon says:

    That revolver has an eight round cylinder. Only Smith and Wesson make one like that, and it’s only a 22LR firearm. Get a better artist next time.

  12. Faxon says:

    In addition, the round in battery is not lined up with the barrel.

  13. Ah_Yea says:

    Faxon, please excuse the artist. Probably some liberal who has actually never seen a gun and wants to ban them all to insure that:
    We The People become We The Sheeple.

  14. badtimes says:

    #7- on the money. Although your first paragraph was a bit understated IMO.
    Kanjorski is also pushing some legislation that says, if you’re too big to fail, then you’re too big to exist. Boy that’s some commie crap too, huh?
    #8 Thomas- as ‘me’ noted, it will apply to public companies. Which 1-2 person public companies are you concerned about?

  15. AdmFubar says:

    i wonder if they will include political parties in this new regulation… 😛
    just a thought…

  16. Timuchin says:

    What was Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s famous statement about America? Who was sitting in his congregation soaking it all in?

  17. chris says:

    Whoa, whoa, whoa. Critical issue framing error.

    Notice that SOX will still apply only to public companies. How small are the smallest publicly held companies? Most likely they are penny stocks that were never even intended to make products, just pump and dump schemes.

    If you have a small company you should stay private. There ought to be extra costs involved with being a public company. If you are after they e-trade monkey crowd you should be subject to extra scrutiny.

    A lot of great business was done when risky businesses were run as partnerships. When your bacon is close to the fire you pay extra special attention.

    SOX has not stopped corporate crime, especially control fraud, because enforcement and penalties against these crimes are not a priority. SOX is intended to help inform investors more reliably about the state of the company.

  18. deowll says:

    “Every day it feels more like they are purposely trying to destroy the economy.”

    The best numbers suggest that 8% of the people working for the White House have some experience in business. They don’t have a clue about how or what needs to be done to help small businesses grow or any business in the normal traditional meaning of the term. They are all theory and no practice. The odds that they won’t get it right approximates certainty.

  19. deowll says:

    John, don’t be stupid! Sign up with Google ads and ignore them other than taking a pay check!

  20. Rick Cain says:

    No regulation will work if it isn’t enforced.

    Sad truth is in America we worship the Golden Calf of big business, and thus turn a blind eye to scams, ponzi schemes, fraud, waste and abuse. Laws on books are just ink on a page until we force private industry to follow the laws the average citizen has to.

    This is why we don’t prosecute executives when they steal 10 million, but we prosecute a homeless man when he steals 10 dollars.


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