(Originally published by SEEN,
Sustainable Energy and Economy Network)
Press Advisory Interviews Available
Stunning depths of government collaboration
with Enron revealed:
Institute for Policy Studies uncovers $7
billion in public assistance for Enron's global operations
WASHINGTON (March 22, 2002) - The Institute
for Policy Studies today released an exhaustive study of public
financing toward Enron's overseas expansion. IPS' new report,
Enron's
Pawns: How Public Institutions Bankrolled Enron's Globalization
Game, (Need Adobe Acrobat to read- ed.) explores how the now-fallen
giant's rise to global prominence absolutely depended upon close
financial relationships with U.S. agencies, the World Bank, and
other government institutions. "It should be a national disgrace
that the U.S. government was subsidizing Enron's far-flung and
often harmful global operations," said John Cavanagh, Director
of IPS.
Researchers from the Sustainable Energy and
Economy Network (SEEN), a project of IPS, have discovered that
over the past decade, 21 agencies representing the U.S. government,
multilateral development banks, and other national governments
helped leverage Enron's global reach with $7.2 billion in public
financing approved for 38 projects in 29 countries.
In addition to detailing exactly who funded
which Enron projects, the study reveals that long before Enron's
tricks came to light in the United States, the company was infamous
for even more egregious practices in the developing world. Armed
with taxpayer financing from agencies like the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation and the World Bank, Enron marched into
developing countries' energy sectors.
The global strategy of privatizing these
countries' energy sectors has its origins in the Reagan Administration,
and became a major priority of international financial institutions
in the 1990s. The end results were not reliable energy at an affordable
price, but rather, price hikes, blackouts, shady deals cut by
government officials, and street riots in which people died. Enron's
infamous partner in crime, accounting firm Arthur Andersen, also
played a role in this global drama: It assessed a utility in the
Dominican Republic that Enron ended up buying at almost $1 billion
less than its actual value, reaping enormous profits for the company.
"When Enron exacted its modus operandi abroad,
U.S. public officials considered it good for U.S. business. Only
when Enron's scandals began to affect Americans did these officials
and institutions hold the corporation at arm's length," said Daphne
Wysham, director of SEEN, and co-author of the report. "And only
when Enron's leadership revealed their greed on home turf did
it become the biggest corporate scandal in recent U.S. history."
Enron's Pawns will be available on SEEN's
website,
http://www.seen.org,
beginning at noon Friday, March 22.
For further information, contact
Jim Vallette at 646-522-1605 or
Daphne Wysham at 301-573-2468.
Enron
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