u/Economy_Ad_9210

The consulting fee structure that predates Enron by 25 years — how Arthur Andersen's 1970s incentive model set up its own collapse (documentary)

The consulting fee structure that predates Enron by 25 years — how Arthur Andersen's 1970s incentive model set up its own collapse (documentary)

Made a documentary on the internal history of Arthur Andersen, and the thing that surprised me most in the research wasn't anything to do with Enron directly — it's how far back the structural problem actually goes.

In the 1970s, under Leonard Spacek's successors, Andersen introduced what former partner Barbara Ley Toffler describes in her book Final Accounting as a roughly 2-to-1 quota — every audit partner was expected to sell about twice their audit fee in consulting services to the same client they were auditing. Bill a client $10,000 for the audit, and you were on the hook to bring in another $20,000 in consulting revenue from that same relationship.

The documentary traces this from Andersen's 1913 founding — when the firm's own founder reportedly turned down a client who wanted him to alter a report, famously saying there wasn't enough money in Chicago to make him do it — through the slow erosion of that culture over the following decades, and into the specific mechanics of the Enron relationship: the SPEs, the mark-to-market lobbying, the roughly $52 million a year Enron was paying the firm by 2001, split between audit and consulting fees.

It also covers a case that gets far less attention than Enron — the SEC's 2001 enforcement action against Andersen over the Waste Management audits, which resulted in a $7 million penalty, the largest ever levied against an accounting firm at the time. That case shows the exact same structural failure — junior auditors flagging real problems, senior partners overruling them because of non-audit revenue tied to the same client — playing out years before Enron ever became a client.

Link: https://youtu.be/FuxHEAr4lgw?si=oA54GwMfW3DaBg2V

Happy to go deeper on any of the sourcing in the comments — most of it comes from the Powers Committee Report, SEC enforcement records, and congressional testimony from 2002.

u/Economy_Ad_9210 — 14 hours ago

Arthur Andersen wasn't Enron's victim — the 2-for-1 consulting quota built the conflict of interest decades before Enron existed

Most retellings treat Arthur Andersen as a firm destroyed by a bad client. I've been digging into the internal structure and I think that gets the causality backwards.

In the 1970s, Andersen leadership introduced a quota system that required every audit partner to sell roughly twice their audit fee in consulting services to the same clients they were independently auditing. Charge a client $10,000 for an audit, and you were expected to sell them $20,000 in consulting.

Think about the actual mechanics of that. The person hired to be your independent check was financially incentivized to never make the client unhappy — because an unhappy client kills the consulting revenue that was now the bigger number on the partner's book. If an auditor found a real problem, flagging it risked the far more profitable relationship sitting on top of it.

By the time Enron came along, that structure had already been running for two decades across other clients — Waste Management, Sunbeam, DeLorean's GPD shell company. Andersen's own junior auditors reportedly caught issues and wrote them up. Senior partners overruled them, in at least one case explicitly because the client was paying millions in non-audit fees.

Enron didn't corrupt Andersen. Enron just found a firm that had already spent 20+ years training itself not to say no to a paying client.

Curious whether people who've actually worked in a multi-service firm see the same structural bind today, or whether post-Sarbanes-Oxley separation rules genuinely fixed this. Is the audit/consulting firewall real in practice, or is it more of a compliance fiction?

reddit.com
u/Economy_Ad_9210 — 1 day ago