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 Wrestling with Reform: Financial Scandals and the Legislation They Inspired
			
			Three Approaches, One Law: Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977
			Landmark Corporate Governance Reforms
			Congress chose none of the plans.  Senator Proxmire’s bill passed the Senate  unanimously, but died in committee in the House due to accounting industry  opposition and the “lateness of the session.”   The administration’s proposals also drew fire.  Democratic Presidential candidate Jimmy  Carter said they would “allow corporations to engage in bribery so long as they  report such illegal transactions to the Department of Commerce.” (22)  With  widespread support, the SEC continued to oppose expansive new legislation.  
			Carter’s victory in 1976 made Proxmire’s bill the likely  vehicle for reform.  But before Congress  could act, the SEC set its own course.  Chairman  Hills wanted “an internal reporting system” reliant on “independent directors,  outside auditors and outside counsel.”  At  the SEC’s request, the New York Stock Exchange added independent audit  committees to its listing requirements.  The  American Institute of Certified Public Accountants produced new accounting  standards, which Hills considered to be the basis of modern corporate  governance.  SEC officials believed that they  had taken adequate steps to remedy the payments problem.  
            As Proxmire’s bill stalled over “minor criticisms,” SEC Commissioner  John Evans urged the SEC to use its administrative powers to enforce the “substance”  of the proposals.  The SEC proposed rules  reflecting these goals, supplemented by disclosure requirements aimed at  management.  Later in the year, under new  SEC Chairman Harold Williams, a routine review of proxy rules escalated into a  full-scale review of corporate governance, with nationwide hearings clearly  intent on increasing shareholder influence.  (23)  In the  following years, the SEC raised disclosure  requirements for independence of directors, demanded more information on audit,  nominating, and compensation committees, and reformed proxy rules.  Thus, the payments scandal and the  legislative response produced parallel and unexpected administrative reforms.
			Commerce Secretary Richardson understood that the Proxmire  bill had “a great deal of superficial appeal” and would likely remain the  vehicle for reform.  In January 1977, Senator  Proxmire reintroduced his bill, now cautiously supported by the Carter  Administration. (24) While maintaining  that SEC proposals were sufficient, Chairman Williams preferred the Senate bill  to a more limited House measure.  In May,  the Proxmire bill passed the Senate; by July, the Carter Administration was  fully behind it.  After ironing out  accounting provisions acceptable to the industry, Congress passed the law  unanimously in December.
			The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 concluded what the New York Times called “one of the  worst scandals in the history of modern international business.”  It placed a $1 million penalty on firms convicted  of bribery abroad, provided smaller penalties and jail time for individual  officers, and implemented the accounting, record-keeping, and governance  provisions requested by the SEC. (25)  Nearly three-and-a-half years after the  initial scandals, Congress, the SEC and two administrations had collaborated to  produce workable legislation and landmark corporate governance reforms.
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				Footnotes:
				(22) Washington Post, “Mr. Tanaka and  Lockheed,” August 21, 1976.
				(23) Washington Post, “SEC Proposes Rules to  Help Stop Hiding of Questionable Payments,” January 20, 1977.  New  York Times, “Washington & Business: Making SEC Listen to the Public,”  September 29, 1977.
				(24) New York Times, “Blumenthal Sees No Use  in Stock Bill to Identify Owners,” March 17, 1977.
				(25) New York  Times, “Senate Backs Foreign Bribery  Bill,” December 7, 1977.
			 
            
			Related Museum Resources
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- April 16, 1977
 
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- April 18, 1977
 
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- April 20, 1977
 
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Oral Histories
04 June 2012
	Richard Nesson
	With Dr. James Stocker
 
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Programs
- 18 September 2007
 
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Fireside Chat - Accounting Aspects of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
	Moderator: Theresa Gabaldon
	Presenter(s): Philip Ameen, Teresa Iannaconi
	
 
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