Difference between revisions of "Richard Simmons"

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:A former partner of [[Arthur Andersen]], Richard has served as adviser to a number of Government ministers. He was co-founder and non-executive director of the [[Cranfield Information Technology Institute]]. He is currently a director of [[Chameleon Nursery Limited]]; a trustee of the [[Foundation for Social and Economic Thinking]] and Acting Chair of Governors at the [[Moat School]]. He was formerly Hon Treasurer, [[Carlton Club]] Political Committee and a member of the [[Royal Academy of Arts]] Development Board. He was awarded the CBE in June 1995 for political and public service.<ref>"[http://www.w-forum.org.uk/directorscvs/ Directors' CVs, Westminster Forum website, accessed October 2008</ref>
 
:A former partner of [[Arthur Andersen]], Richard has served as adviser to a number of Government ministers. He was co-founder and non-executive director of the [[Cranfield Information Technology Institute]]. He is currently a director of [[Chameleon Nursery Limited]]; a trustee of the [[Foundation for Social and Economic Thinking]] and Acting Chair of Governors at the [[Moat School]]. He was formerly Hon Treasurer, [[Carlton Club]] Political Committee and a member of the [[Royal Academy of Arts]] Development Board. He was awarded the CBE in June 1995 for political and public service.<ref>"[http://www.w-forum.org.uk/directorscvs/ Directors' CVs, Westminster Forum website, accessed October 2008</ref>
  
In an interview with Accountancy Age <ref>Life after Andersen: The one who left to run a business (2004)http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/features/2040381/life-andersen-left-run-business</ref> He stated of Arthur Anderson's collapse:
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In an interview with Accountancy Age, Simmons stated of Arthur Andersen's collapse:
  
:"In a sense, this was just one of a number of events that were the product of the euphoria of the late nineties in financial markets around the world, when there was a divorce between economic performance and people's perception of what was happening. That was the background to the collapse at Enron. It set the climate and wasn't the cause,' says Richard Simmons CBE, a former partner at Andersen."
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:In a sense, this was just one of a number of events that were the product of the euphoria of the late nineties in financial markets around the world, when there was a divorce between economic performance and people's perception of what was happening. That was the background to the collapse at Enron. It set the climate and wasn't the cause.<ref>Michelle Perry, ["http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/features/2040381/life-andersen-left-run-business Life after Andersen: The one who left to run a business]", 24 June 2004, accessed October 2008</ref>
  
 
Simmons had worked there for 30 years, and was also deputy secretary general to the International Accounting Standards Committee and somewhat preciently in the interview he also observed that 'what happened to Andersen was what was happening widely; but for the grace of God, others could have gone there too'.  But it is not so much the euphoric background to Enron that bothered people it is the hard facts of corporate deception that the accountants did not notice. Now Enron like practicies have been normalised under general terms such as the 'credit crunch.'
 
Simmons had worked there for 30 years, and was also deputy secretary general to the International Accounting Standards Committee and somewhat preciently in the interview he also observed that 'what happened to Andersen was what was happening widely; but for the grace of God, others could have gone there too'.  But it is not so much the euphoric background to Enron that bothered people it is the hard facts of corporate deception that the accountants did not notice. Now Enron like practicies have been normalised under general terms such as the 'credit crunch.'

Revision as of 16:04, 20 October 2008

Richard Simmons, CBE is chairman of the BDP Media Group Limited, a group of "specialist, integrated communications companies".[1]

The Westminster Forum website has this to say about Simmons:

A former partner of Arthur Andersen, Richard has served as adviser to a number of Government ministers. He was co-founder and non-executive director of the Cranfield Information Technology Institute. He is currently a director of Chameleon Nursery Limited; a trustee of the Foundation for Social and Economic Thinking and Acting Chair of Governors at the Moat School. He was formerly Hon Treasurer, Carlton Club Political Committee and a member of the Royal Academy of Arts Development Board. He was awarded the CBE in June 1995 for political and public service.[2]

In an interview with Accountancy Age, Simmons stated of Arthur Andersen's collapse:

In a sense, this was just one of a number of events that were the product of the euphoria of the late nineties in financial markets around the world, when there was a divorce between economic performance and people's perception of what was happening. That was the background to the collapse at Enron. It set the climate and wasn't the cause.[3]

Simmons had worked there for 30 years, and was also deputy secretary general to the International Accounting Standards Committee and somewhat preciently in the interview he also observed that 'what happened to Andersen was what was happening widely; but for the grace of God, others could have gone there too'. But it is not so much the euphoric background to Enron that bothered people it is the hard facts of corporate deception that the accountants did not notice. Now Enron like practicies have been normalised under general terms such as the 'credit crunch.'

He was also chairman of the Accountant's Conservative Circle of the Bow Group now housed in one of CAN's new Mezzanines, at 32-36 Loman Street, Southwark, London SE1 0EH.

Affilations

Notes

  1. "About us" BDP Media Group website, accessed October 2008
  2. "[http://www.w-forum.org.uk/directorscvs/ Directors' CVs, Westminster Forum website, accessed October 2008
  3. Michelle Perry, ["http://www.accountancyage.com/accountancyage/features/2040381/life-andersen-left-run-business Life after Andersen: The one who left to run a business]", 24 June 2004, accessed October 2008