Don’t condemn corporate America just yet
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Enron, Global Crossing, WorldCom, Tyco. These company names send
chills down many of our spines. However, let’s not get carried away
and condemn all business people at once. If you have picked up a
newspaper in the past weeks you would think our entire capitalist
system has crumbled because of a few unethical individuals. We need
to remember a few things before we form a collective lynch mob after
corporate America.
You will not read anywhere that the American business community
supports and voluntarily provides more than 130 million jobs and
health care to 177 million people. You will not read that American
businesses donate $20 billion to charities each year. Or that the
American business community contributes $150 billion annually to
clean up the environment.
The point is that business is extremely important to our everyday
lives and we cannot condemn the entire system or stop investing
because of a few individuals. There are approximately 17,000 public
companies in the United States and only a handful of them have been
accused of illegal or unethical behavior. As the old saying goes,
“Let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater.”
The truth is that the business community is primarily responsible
for generating the nation’s $10.4-trillion gross domestic product, a
40% rise in the median income over the last decade, and a prosperity
level that has allowed two-thirds of Americans to own their own
homes.
America’s business community is extremely resilient and strong. It
is unfair to put all businesspeople in a bad light. Although
President Bush, Congress, the Securities & Exchange Commission, the
New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ and the National Assn. of Securities
Dealers have all acted at record speed to improve our system with
reforms to strengthen accountability, the American public must take
responsibility for our economic well-being.
We must continue our confidence in the nation’s economic system.
The U.S. economy flexed its power after the Sept. 11 attacks and the
2001 recession, growing 6.1% in the first quarter of 2002. It is
projected to grow by 2.5% to 3.0% for the entire year.
Our economic foundation is strong. Consumer spending remains high.
Productivity is expanding. Inflation is low. Wages are growing. Job
creation is solid. New home sales are moving at record levels. We are
a strong nation with a strong economic future and we must continue to
invest in our economic foundation.
It is up to each and every businessperson to continue their
confidence in our economic system. Let’s not let a few unethical
executives or some negative headlines break our capitalist spirit
that built our great nation. Without the business community, America
would be a very bleak place to live. Instead of tearing down our
economic system, let’s unite and support it. We have a bright future,
and with everyone’s commitment to America’s businesses, it will
continue indefinitely.
* RICHARD LUERHS is president and chief executive of the Newport
Beach Chamber of Commerce
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