Back to Enron: Were the Wrong Lessons Learned for Corporate Governance and Energy Policy? - podcast episode cover

Back to Enron: Were the Wrong Lessons Learned for Corporate Governance and Energy Policy?

Oct 30, 20081 hr 21 min
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Rob Bradley, formerly Ken Lay's speechwriter and a 16-year Enron employee, argues that the Left has incorrectly blamed capitalism for Enron.  But he also believes that the Right’s take on the company's collapse has scarcely acknowledged the extent to which the mixed economy and anti-capitalist doctrines allowed the worst to get on top.

Bradley maintains that a preoccupation with the diagnostics of Enron's failure (the market did exact its revenge) has neglected the why behind the why.  The systemic failure known as Enron, Bradley argues, not only exonerates free-market capitalism but also strengthens  the capitalist worldview.  Enron's boom and bust is the story of how company founder and chairman Ken Lay developed a sophisticated business model based on rent-seeking (political  capitalism).  Of particular note, Enron tried and failed to parlay climate alarmism, "energy sustainability," and social corporate responsibility into business viability.

 

Bradley's unique, insider interpretation of Enron has direct implications for today's debates over energy and climate policy, business ethics theory, and best business practices. William Niskanen, who holds a somewhat different view, will comment.

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