Paul Introduces Legislation
to Repeal Section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley
April
14, 2005
Washington,
DC- Congressman Ron Paul of Texas today introduced legislation that repeals a
particularly onerous provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
Paul’s legislation, titled “The Due Process and Economic
Competitiveness Restoration Act,” seeks to repair damage done to the economy
by repealing section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley and restoring some measure of
economic due process rights.
Paul,
a member of the House Financial Services committee, termed the 404 provisions
anti-business and anti-competitive. “It’s
time to make public what the business community already acknowledges privately:
Sarbanes-Oxley is a disaster,” Paul stated.
“Now that the Enron and Worldcom hysteria is over, it’s time to admit
that Congress made a terrible mistake.”
Journalist
Robert Novak, in his column of April 7, said that, "[f]or more than a year,
CEOs and CFOs have been telling me that 404 is a costly nightmare” and “ask
nearly any business executive to name the biggest menace facing corporate
America, and the answer is apt to be number 404…a dagger aimed at the heart of
the economy.”
Sarbanes-Oxley
dramatically raises the cost of doing business, which favors large companies
over small competitors. These costs
retard economic growth and hurt American workers. It also tramples due process rights by subjecting CEOs and
CFOs to criminal penalties for inadvertent accounting errors.
Not surprisingly, many American and foreign companies simply have
deregistered from U.S. stock exchanges rather than spend millions in compliance
costs. Financial analysts have
identified section 404 as the major reason why American corporations are
hoarding cash instead of investing it in new ventures.
“Congress
has zero credibility when it comes to fiscal accountability,” Paul concluded.
“Just look at Fannie Mae and Social Security for two obvious examples.
More importantly, Congress has no constitutional authority to regulate
the accounting standards of private businesses.
Every state in the nation has fraud laws on the books, and the market
responded to Enron rumors well before Congress held any hearings on the matter.
Once again, Congress has presumed to understand what it does not, and
regulate what it has no authority to regulate.”