Slush fund

Fund used for illegal purposes
Political corruption
Forms and concepts
  • Bribery
  • Cronyism
  • Economics of corruption
  • Electoral fraud
  • Elite capture
  • Influence peddling
  • Kleptocracy
  • Mafia state
  • Nepotism
  • Pyrrhic defeat theory
  • Slush fund
  • Simony
  • State capture
  • State-corporate crime
  • Throffer
Anti-corruption
Corruption by country
Africa
Asia
Europe
North America
Central America
South America
Oceania
  • v
  • t
  • e

A slush fund is a fund or account used for miscellaneous income and expenses, particularly when these are corrupt or illegal.[1] Such funds may be kept hidden and maintained separately from money that is used for legitimate purposes. Slush funds may be employed by government or corporate officials in efforts to pay influential people discreetly in return for preferential treatment, advance information (such as non-public information in financial transactions), and other services.[2] The funds themselves may not be kept secret but the source of the funds or how they were acquired or for what purposes they are used may be hidden. Use of slush funds to influence government activities may be viewed as subversive of the democratic process.

A slush fund can also be a reserve account used to reduce fluctuations in an organization's earnings by withholding them when they are high and supplementing them when they are low. This type of slush fund is not inherently corrupt, but is nonetheless a form of earnings management that tends to mislead the public about the organization's financial condition.[3]

Examples

Richard Nixon's "Checkers speech" of 1952 was a somewhat successful effort to dispel a scandal concerning a slush fund of campaign contributions.[4] Years later, Nixon's presidential re-election campaign used slush funds to buy the silence of the "White House Plumbers".[5]

Financial derivative traders for Enron employed a slush fund system called "prudency reserves," in which the department reported part of each trade's profit or loss to the company and withheld the remainder. This system was originally used to regulate the trading department's profits, but also enabled the company to conceal large profits during the 2000–01 California electricity crisis.[6]

Etymology

"Slush fund" was originally a nautical term for the cash that a ship's crew raised by selling fat (slush) scraped from cooking pots to tallow makers. This cash was kept separate from the ship's accounts and used to make small purchases for the crew.[7][8]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Slush fund". Dictionary.com Unabridged. Retrieved 4 Jun 2017.
  2. ^ Law, Jonathan. A Dictionary of Finance and Banking, 5 ed. ed., 2014. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199664931.001.0001/acref-9780199664931-e-3516
  3. ^ Wherry, Frederick F., ed. (2015). "Accounting, Critical". The SAGE Encyclopedia of Economics and Society.
  4. ^ LaGesse, David (January 17, 2008). "The 1952 Checkers Speech: The Dog Carries the Day for Richard Nixon". U.S. News & World Report.
  5. ^ Weiner, Tim (October 31, 1997). "Transcripts of Nixon Tapes Show the Path to Watergate". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Fox, Lauren (2004). Enron: The Rise and Fall.
  7. ^ "slush fund, n." OED Online. Oxford University Press, September 2016. Web. 8 September 2016.
  8. ^ Garg, Anu. A.Word.A.Day mailing list, 2017-Mar-01. http://wordsmith.org/words/slush_fund.html
  • v
  • t
  • e
Corruption in different fields
Measures of corruption
Forms or aspects
of corruption
General
State
Elections
Institutions dealing
with corruption
International
National
Anti-corruption
Laws and
enforcement
International
instruments
and efforts
Protest
movements