Govt. Wisens Up on Sarbanes-Oxley

Fewer cos. would be subject to Sarbanes-Oxley audits under House amendments.

ByABC News
September 11, 2008, 4:36 PM

Nov. 6, 2009 -- After nearly a decade of doing everything it can destroy the creation of new high tech companies, Congress finally does something right and the whining has already begun.

This week, by a vote of 37-32, the House Financial Services Committee voted to amend the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to permanently exempt companies valued at less than $75 million from the audit portion of that law.

The bipartisan sponsors of the bill were two Congressmen: Democrat John Adler and Republican Scott Garrett, both from New Jersey.

Apparently, in what may be the first actual support of small business creation in America in its year in office, the amendment was also backed by the White House, in particular chief of staff Rahm Emanuel.

It seems that the Obama administration has finally begun to realize that you can't create jobs at the same time that you are strangling the job creators.

Kudos to them all. As anyone who has read this column for any length of time knows, I am a sworn enemy of Sarbanes-Oxley -- not because its motives are wrong, but because it stands as a classic example of using a legislative meat-axe when a scalpel was required. Since it was passed in 2003, by my estimate, S-Ox has cost American industry just short of one-quarter trillion dollars money that one might imagine American companies could use right about now.

But that loss, to my mind, is far less than the damage done to the high tech industry -- the single greatest source of new jobs, new innovation, and economic health we have -- by the loss of two generations of new companies that were unborn, died early from lack of funding, or were swallowed up by big companies because they couldn't Go Public with stock. Indeed, in the years since S-Ox passed, there have been almost no high tech IPOs, compared to hundreds in the decade before. All thanks, in large part, to Sarbanes-Oxley.

It's easy to appreciate why Sarbanes-Oxley was passed, but much harder to understand (beyond bureaucratic inertia, of course) why such a destructive law -- one that has accomplished little of what it set out to do, while simultaneously destroying new wealth creation, reducing national competitiveness, and furthering the gap between the haves and have-nots in America -- has continued to stay on the books. Or why it still has defenders.