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Accounting lunacy, indeed.


THE STORY WOULD have been easy to miss. Robert Merritt, chief financial officer of the Outback Steakhouse Outback Steakhouse is a casual dining American restaurant chain based in Tampa, Florida with over 900 locations in 23 countries throughout North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia.  chain, announced his retirement because of the difficulties of accounting for restaurant leases. "Recent lunacy lunacy: see insanity.  over lease accounting took me past the breaking point," he said, noting that more than 150 companies have been forced to restate earnings because of the issue.

Every CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  and C-level team is feeling Merritt's pain. The accounting, auditing and lawyering clearly have gone too far. The partners of outside auditing firms have become more conservative than ever, refusing to sign off on many transactions and practices that have been allowed for years due to worries about what the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (or PCAOB) (sometimes called "Peekaboo") is a private-sector, non-profit corporation created by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a 2002 United States federal law, to oversee the auditors of public companies.  might do or say. That auditor must get the opinion of a "concurring" partner for every serious decision and a third partner may get involved if there is a filing to be made to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). If those partners can't reach consensus on a subject such as "revenue recognition," the issue gets kicked upstairs to a national review process inside the audit firm and possibly reaches the point of arbitration. At each stage, the auditors are worried that the PCAOB PCAOB Public Company Accounting Oversight Board  will exercise its "peek-a-boo" privilege and demand to see an avalanche of paper that illuminates how they've done their jobs.

The reason this is so crippling is that there are many gray zones in Generally Accepted Accounting Principles The standard accounting rules, regulations, and procedures used by companies in maintaining their financial records.

Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) provide companies and accountants with a consistent set of guidelines that cover both broad accounting
 that require judgments to be made. If accountants and auditors are so fearful that they can't make decisions, CEOs have to devote enormous resources to resolving what are often petty issues. They can't concentrate on growing their businesses, which has serious consequences for job creation, the financial markets and U.S. competitiveness in the world.

CEOs must keep up the pressure on the SEC, the PCAOB and others to restore sanity. Post-Enron, the worst excesses have been wrung wrung  
v.
Past tense and past participle of wring.


wrung
Verb

the past of wring

wrung wring
 out of the system. Let CEOs get back to their real work--running their businesses and creating wealth.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Chief Executive Publishing
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:EDITORIAL
Publication:Chief Executive (U.S.)
Article Type:Editorial
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2005
Words:333
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