Jeffrey Sonnenfeld

This Time, the Fallen Corporate Icons Have Gatsbyesque Roots

 

This story by Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, associate dean of Yale University's School of Management, is part of a special series by TheStreet.com investigating shareholders' reaction to corporate corruption on Wall Street. Click here to see a full listing of stories.

The demography of the corporate scandals of 2002 differ so from the financial corruption 70 years earlier that one might wonder how the American Dream became a nightmare.

While the reviled rogue financiers of the 1930s were largely the misguided scions of prominent wealthy families, the more recent abuses have been committed by upwardly mobile strivers aspiring for identification with an aristocratic heritage they personally lacked. Rather than abuses of class influence, the recent rogue CEOs desperately sought class confusion.

Bernard Ebbers was a bar bouncer and high-school basketball coach -- not a telecommunications engineer or financier -- just before launching WorldCom. Enron's Ken Lay was the son of a part-time Baptist preacher and tractor salesman. Adelphia's John Rigas was the son a Greek immigrant hot-dog salesman. Tyco's "deal-a-day" Dennis Kozlowski was the son of a New Jersey policeman.

Fallen financial wizards such as Enron's Jeff Skilling; WorldCom's Scott Sullivan, Tyco's Mark Swartz and Citigroup's Jack Grubman had similar humble origins. For that matter, GE's Jack Welch was the son of train conductor ("Nearly every day was the same -- a ticket-punching journey through the same 10 depots over and over again.") and queen of class Martha Stewart the daughter of an autocratic alcoholic who failed in his career as a salesman.

TheStreet Premium Services

Jim Cramer
Jim Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS:
Trade right alongside a Wall Street pro — enjoy access to his Charitable Trust portfolio and be sent trade alerts BEFORE he makes a move. Learn More
OptionsProfits
OptionsProfits:
Get 50+ trade ideas a week from the industry's top options experts. Plus — exclusive commentary on market trends and essential trading tools. Learn More
Real Money
Real Money:
Our team of professional Wall Street Pros — including Jim Cramer, Doug Kass, and Nicholas Vardy — delivers intelligent analysis, timely trade ideas, and colorful commentary. Learn More
Stocks Under $10
Stocks Under $10:
Break into the market with small- and mid-cap stocks... all $10 or less! David Peltier tells you exactly which low-priced stocks he's buying and selling. Learn More
To begin commenting right away, you can log in below using your Disqus, Facebook, Twitter, OpenID or Yahoo login credentials. Alternatively, you can post a comment as a "guest" just by entering an email address. Your use of the commenting tool is subject to multiple terms of service/use and privacy policies - see here for more details.
blog comments powered by Disqus
Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
12,419.86 1,313.32 2,837.36 16.25
Oil *
103.00
DOWN
160.83
DOWN
19.10
DOWN
33.63
DOWN
1.06
10 Yr
1.62%
SPDR Gold
151.91
-1.28%
-1.43%
-1.17%
-6.12%
Data delayed 20 minutes

Top Stories and Tools

Articles From

After the Bell

Before the Bell

Booyah! Newsletter

Midday Bell

TheStreet Top 10 Stories

Winners & Losers

We respect your privacy.
Podcasts

Connect with TheStreet