Monday, September 24, 2007
How to Wet the Whistle
Corporate whistleblowers might need a monetary nudge, researchers suggest.
For a working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, “Who Blows the Whistle on Corporate Fraud?,” Alexander Dyck, Adair Morse and Luigi Zingales studied 230 cases of alleged corporate fraud at larger companies between 1996 and 2004 (www.nber.org/papers/w12882).
Fraud allegations came from all sorts of sources but, before Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) regulation, only about 35 percent of the cases came from entities designated to make such inquiries—regulators, auditors and the SEC. After SOX, the figure rose to slightly more than 50 percent, mainly reflecting a sharp increase in activity by auditors.
SOX also sought to encourage whistleblowers by establishing procedures to submit information anonymously and providing protection for employees against being fired for coming forward with such information. But despite increased incentives, the study found employee whistleblowing occurred in approximately 15.6 percent of the post-SOX cases, a decrease from 20.7 percent before the law.
The authors note that whistleblowing is risky—in 82 percent of the cases where employees were named, they alleged they were fired, quit under duress or “had significantly altered responsibilities” as a result.
See full Article.