I'm tracking a new phenomenon called "scandal fatigue." It sets in when the
corporate crime rate gets too high and the numbers being bandied about become
too boggling to get your mind around.
For instance, I was plenty angry when WorldCom announced that it had misstated
its earnings by $3.7 billion. I couldn't really get a handle on what a figure
like that meant -- but I knew it was a pantload. Then they looked through the
books again and realized that, oops, the amount was actually $7 billion. Was I
supposed to be twice as ticked off? Or were there just too many zeros to grasp?
The reason our eyes start to glaze over at a certain point is that we lack
what T.S. Eliot called "an objective correlative" -- a way of relating to something
as abstract and conceptual as a seven followed by nine zeros.
With that in mind, I've done a little research in an effort to offer up some
perspective on the magnitude of these crimes. My hope is that when you see a number
like $100 million -- the amount Jeff Skilling pocketed from Enron before abandoning
the sinking ship -- expressed not in dollars but in terms we can all identify
with, your outrage meter will be set to the proper scale.
Here goes.
The total amount of sweetheart insider loans doled out to John Rigas (Adelphia),
Bernie Ebbers (WorldCom), Stephen Hilbert (Conseco), Dennis Kozlowski (Tyco) and
Ken Lay (Enron) was $3.9 billion.
With $3.9 billion, you could:
-- Fund Habitat for Humanity to build 83,691 homes at a cost of $46,600 each
for America's homeless.
-- Send 35,583 poor but deserving students to Harvard Business School.
-- Buy 390 million tickets to see "Austin Powers in Goldmember." Or one medium
popcorn and soda.
-- Loan United Airlines the $1.8 billion it says it needs to avoid bankruptcy
-- twice. Or you could just flush the money down the toilet. The results will
be the same.
-- Foot the bill for you and the 195 members of your high school class you
really liked to ride a Russian rocket into space. The downside is two of you will
have to sit next to 'N Sync's Lance Bass.
-- Finance 39 equally priced sequels to Eddie Murphy's $100 million flop,
"Pluto Nash." You could ... but please don't.
-- Buy every WorldCom shareholder a Xerox copier, some aspirin from Rite Aid,
a year of long-distance service from Qwest, and a share of Enron stock (suitable
for framing).
-- Fund the SEC's new, greatly increased, annual budget for five years.
Still having a little trouble with the figures? Well, consider this: According
to Fortune magazine, the total amount of money raked in by corporate executives
selling company stock even while their companies crashed and burned was roughly
$66 billion.
With $66 billion, you could:
-- Fund the annual budget of the FBI, corporate crime-fighting included, for
16 years.
-- Give 74 times what America currently gives in foreign aid to all of sub-Saharan
Africa.
-- Cover the entire $25 billion America has spent fighting the war against
terrorism in Afghanistan. And still have enough left over to give every Afghan
more than two times their average yearly income.
-- Spend 132 million nights with Julia Roberts at the nightly rate she charged
as the hooker in Pretty Woman.
-- Buy 3.3 billion copies of "Who Moved My Cheese?" But even if you read each
and every one, you still couldn't explain why it's been a best seller for over
two years.
-- Pay President Bush's $400,000 salary for 165,000 years. Although, if he's
anything like his dad, you'll only be on the hook until 2004.
-- Pay the $1.08 million sales tax on Dennis Kozlowski's artwork and still
have $65.99 billion left to buy every masterpiece in the Metropolitan Museum of
Art's Impressionist collection at its assessed value.
I imagine your blood is really boiling now. But maybe still not enough to
take action. Then try these numbers on for size:
The total loss in market value of WorldCom, Tyco, Qwest, Enron and Global
Crossing was $427 billion.
With $427 billion, you could:
-- Fund the United Nations for the next 263 years and still have $164 billion
left over for unforeseen famine relief and peacekeeping missions.
-- Get Argentina back on its feet by paying off its external debt three times
over.
-- Give $356 to every man, woman and child on the planet living in poverty.
-- Build and deploy 2,702 comet-hunting Contour satellites. The cost to track
them down is extra.
-- Buy 61 billion packs of cigarettes, now $7 each in New York City. Or you
could transplant the lungs of 1.7 million patients -- at $250,000 each -- suffering
from irreversible emphysema.
-- Order 34 billion prime cut filet mignons from Omaha Steaks. Baked potato
not included.
-- Pay the combined salaries of every player in baseball for the next 237
years. Although I don't know why you would. Despite your generosity, they'd still
disappoint you and go on strike.
Copyright © 1998-2002 Christabella, Inc.
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