Details

The End of Ethics and A Way Back


The End of Ethics and A Way Back

How To Fix A Fundamentally Broken Global Financial System
1. Aufl.

von: Theodore Roosevelt Malloch, Jordan D. Mamorsky

28,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 22.02.2013
ISBN/EAN: 9781118550274
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 288

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Beschreibungen

<p><b>Bestselling author and professor Ted Malloch calls for real financial reform to restore confidence and fairness to a broken system</b></p> <p>From Ponzi schemes to the credit crisis to the real estate bubble, the financial industry seems to have lost its way on the road to riches. As private greed continues to undermine the public good, one might wonder what ever happened to business ethics. And how can we reform the global financial system to benefit everyone, rather than just the very lucky few? In <i>The End of Ethics and the Way Back</i>, the bestselling author of <i>Doing Virtuous Business</i> teams up with attorney and Yale University Postdoctoral Fellow, Jordan Mamorsky to examine the most recent failures of business virtue, prudence, and governance—from Bernie Madoff to Jon Corzine and MF Global—before offering a set of structural and holistic solutions for our current ethical crisis in global finance.</p> <ul> <li>Features compelling case studies that reveal the saturation of economic vice in global finance</li> <li>Suggests structural reforms to the global financial system that would increase confidence among consumers and encourage ethical behavior among finance professionals</li> <li>Written by Ted Malloch, author of the bestseller <i>Doing Virtuous Business</i> with attorney Jordan Mamorsky</li> <li>Ideal for financial regulators, business students and academics, and professionals in the finance industry</li> </ul>
<p>Foreword xvii</p> <p>Acknowledgments xxix</p> <p>Introduction xxxiii</p> <p>Prologue xxxix</p> <p><b>Part One: Economic Vice 1</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 1 The Selfish Betrayal of the Global Investor: Libor and Its Consequences 3</b></p> <p>The Calculation of Libor 5</p> <p>The Rise and Fall of the World’s</p> <p>Financial Benchmark 8</p> <p>Knowingly Asleep at the Wheel 13</p> <p>A Troubling New Normal 16</p> <p>Notes 17</p> <p><b>Chapter 2 Jon Corzine’s Fallen Empire of Risk: MF Global 19</b></p> <p>History of MF Global 21</p> <p>Jon Corzine’s Midwestern Roots 22</p> <p>The Rise of “Fuzzy” 23</p> <p>The Establishment of MF Global 26</p> <p>Rogue Trader Scandal 27</p> <p>From Gubernatorial Disgrace to MF Global CEO 28</p> <p>MF Global under Corzine 29</p> <p>Risk Governance Failures 32</p> <p>Notes 33</p> <p><b>Chapter 3 The Continued Rating Agencies Game: Will Rating Agencies Be Reined in for the Sake of Global Market Stability? 37</b></p> <p>History of Rating Agencies 43</p> <p>Mortgages and the Ratings Boondoggle 47</p> <p>Notes 51</p> <p><b>Chapter 4 Belligerent Leadership and the Demise of Lehman Brothers 55</b></p> <p>History of Lehman 57</p> <p>Brewing Anger 60</p> <p>Uncaging the “Animal” 62</p> <p>Culture of Anger 64</p> <p>Increasing Risk and Authority 66</p> <p>Walsh’s Rise 67</p> <p>A Gorilla Bursting the Bubble 69</p> <p>Extreme Leverage 71</p> <p>The Deception of Repo 105 73</p> <p>Fuld’s Marginalization of Risk Management 75</p> <p>Fuld’s Last Chance to Save Lehman 77</p> <p>Notes 79</p> <p><b>Chapter 5 How Out-of-Control Pride Brought Down Bear Stearns 83</b></p> <p>History of Bear 85</p> <p>A Different PSD 89</p> <p>Greenberg’s Vision of Corporate Thrift at Bear Stearns 91</p> <p>Bridge Bum Turned Bear Salesman and CEO 93</p> <p>A Casino Culture 95</p> <p>BSAM: Bear Stearns’ Kryptonite 98</p> <p>“Never a Losing Month” 100</p> <p>The End of Bear Stearns: The Importance of Golf and Bridge during a Liquidity Crisis 105</p> <p>JP Morgan and the Takeover of Bear 106</p> <p>Notes 107</p> <p><b>Chapter 6 Tyco: Exceptional Greed and the Destruction of a Billion-Dollar Company 113</b></p> <p>Tyco History 115</p> <p>The Makings of a “Bad” CEO 117</p> <p>Seeds of Greed 118</p> <p>Kozlowski’s Culture of Fear at Grinnel 119</p> <p>Looting the Company 120</p> <p>Kozlowski’s Accomplices 124</p> <p>A Convicted “Piggy” 128</p> <p>Notes 128</p> <p><b>Chapter 7 Insatiable Lust and Two of the Most Destructive Ponzi Schemes in American History 131</b></p> <p>The Ponzi Scheme and Society 133</p> <p>Bernie Madoff and the Seeds of Lustful Temptations 134</p> <p>Madoff ’s Culture of Sexual, Criminal, and Moral Deviance 138</p> <p>Tom Petters, the High School Dropout 139</p> <p>Birth of the Ponzi Scheme, Petters Company Inc. 140</p> <p>Succumbing to Uncontrollable Lust 141</p> <p>Madoff ’s Cast of Characters 142</p> <p>Petters’ Cast of Characters 151</p> <p>Will We Witness Another Madoff ? 155</p> <p>Notes 155</p> <p><b>Chapter 8 HealthSouth and WorldCom: How a Gluttonous Appetite for Expansion Resulted in Accounting Fraud and Failed Corporations 161</b></p> <p>HealthSouth 163</p> <p>Bernie Ebbers and WorldCom 172</p> <p>Blunting Future Accounting Fraud 178</p> <p>Notes 179</p> <p><b>Part Two: Recommendations 183</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 9 Why Financial Regulation Has Failed, and What to Do about It 185</b></p> <p>The Failed Promises of DoddFrank 185</p> <p>The New Rules of the Game that Reinforce Vice 189</p> <p>A Dummies’ Guide to Save the SEC 194</p> <p>The Regulatory Reforms Necessary to Reverse the End of Ethics 195</p> <p>Reforms Needed for the Commodities Market 202</p> <p>The Need for Heightened and Streamlined Fiduciary Rules 205</p> <p>Notes 208</p> <p><b>Chapter 10 The Case for Reintroducing Governance and Morality 213</b></p> <p>The Important Demand for Corporate Governance 213</p> <p>The Importance of Corporate Responsibility 215</p> <p>The Importance of Reputation and Avoiding Long-Term Litigation Costs 218</p> <p>Bonuses Redux: Corporate Welfare Reform and Cutting Golden Parachutes 220</p> <p>The Need to Morally Redefine Ourselves on the Macro Level 223</p> <p>Rebuilding Our Character 226</p> <p>How to Remedy the Evils in Modern-Day Consumerism 227</p> <p>Virtue and the Moral Life 228</p> <p>The Consequences of Modern Selfishness 230</p> <p>Modern Theories and Institutions 232</p> <p>Democratic Morality and Our Current Crisis 233</p> <p>Notes 234</p> <p><b>Chapter 11 The Way Back 237</b></p> <p>Appendix 241</p> <p>About the Authors 249</p> <p>Index 251</p>
<p><b>Theodore Roosevelt Malloch</b> is Research Professor for the Spiritual Capital Initiative at Yale University. He was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The Roosevelt Group, a leading strategic management and thought leadership company. He has served on the executive board of the World Economic Forum-Davos; has held an ambassadorial-level position at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland; worked in the U.S. State Department and Senate; worked in the capital markets at Salomon Brothers on Wall Street; and has sat on a number of corporate, mutual fund, and not-for-profit boards, including the University of Toronto International Governing Council, a Pew Charitable Trust board, and the Templeton Foundation. Ted earned his PhD in international political economy from the University of Toronto.</p> <p><b>Jordan D. Mamorsky</b> is an experienced attorney specializing in business regulation, corporate governance, and compliance. He was a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University where his research focused on the legal, financial, and ethical failures that contribute to financial crisis, corporate illegality, and breach of legal fiduciary duties. Jordan formerly worked at the U.S. Treasury Department, where he received the "special act award" in recognition of his recommendations detailing the dangers of predatory subprime lending in low-income communities. He is a contributor to <i>Morningstar Advisor</i>. He is an active practicing attorney and has represented Fortune 500 companies, global investment banks, insurance companies, hedge fund managers, health services corporations and an international sports league, among other clients.</p>
<p>"An extraordinarily insightful work! This book takes the reader from the symptomatic to the seminal issues in corporate ethics. Ted Malloch brings home to us in no uncertain terms that economic value cannot sustain itself without the foundation of wholesome human values. CEOs, leaders in governments, and heads of educational institutions and the non-profit sector will benefit immensely from reading this work. It is easily one of the best books I have read in a decade."<br /> <b>—Professor Debashis Chatterjee</b>, Director, Indian Institute of Management, Kozhikode; author of <i>Timeless Leadership</i></p> <p>"Malloch takes a stand against the 'world disorder' of economic vice and short-term thinking that he argues has eroded values on Wall Street, Main Street, and throughout society. A sobering assessment rooted in virtuous principle and a passion for rebuilding trust, reimagining our institutions, and demanding better of ourselves."<br /> <b>—Dipak C. Jain</b>, Dean, INSEAD, France</p> <p>"The authors of this book understand the crucial distinction between ethics and mere compliance, and convey the decline of ethical values in the workplace in a clear and straightforward manner. This is a very important book for those seeking to get the financial system back on the right track."<br /> <b>—Jonathan R. Macey</b>, Sam Harris Professor of Corporate Law, Corporate Finance, and Securities Law, Yale Law School</p> <p>"<i>The End of Ethics</i> is like a plumb line. It goes straight to the heart of the issue. Highly readable, it pulls no punches in detailing some of the worst cases of recent economic fraud. Then it puts forward sensible solutions that can discourage such widespread abuse of our freedoms. Read it to understand what is wrong with our current form of capitalism and how you can help to set it right."<br /> <b>—Prabhu Guptara</b>, Executive Director, Wolfsberg UBS, Switzerland</p> <p>"<i>The End of Ethics</i> provides a fascinating account of the interaction between personal greed, flawed corporate cultures, and a lack of accountability and oversight within the broader financial system. The conclusions it draws are as much an injunction against the tacit acceptance within many corporations that greed is good, as it is a challenge to re-establish capitalism's moral compass. As such, this book educates and inspires."<br /> <b>—Mollie Painter-Morland</b>, Associate Director and Professor, Institute for Business and Professional Ethics, DePaul University</p>

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