
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.