home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- BUSINESS, Page 77Business NotesACCOUNTINGThe Big Eight, Seven, Six . . .
-
-
- Like nervous bachelors worried they may never find a mate,
- many of the Big Eight accounting firms in the U.S. have begun
- stampeding to the altar. Last week Deloitte, Haskins & Sells and
- Touche Ross announced that they had agreed to join forces as
- Deloitte & Touche (total revenues: $3.9 billion). Earlier the
- same day Arthur Andersen and Price Waterhouse revealed that they
- too have begun negotiating a merger that would produce a $4.9
- billion firm. The announcements followed a decision by Ernst &
- Whinney and Arthur Young in June to consummate their own $4.3
- billion corporate marriage.
-
- The passion to merge has been fueled by the desire of major
- firms to become global competitors. "The cost of doing business
- is much greater today than it was 15 years ago," says William
- Grollman, professor of accounting at Fordham University's
- Graduate School of Business. "Mergers reduce these costs and
- eliminate a competitor."
-
-