Skip to section navigationSkip to content Commonwealth of Australia Coat of Arms Parliament of Australia - Department of the Parliamentary Library
HomeSenateHouse of RepresentativesLive BroadcastingThis Week in Parliament FindFrequently asked questionsContact

Research Note 44 1996-97

Banking Laws in Australia

Brendan Bailey
Law and Bills Digest Group
May 1997

Commonwealth, State and Industry Controls in Australia

Deregulation of the Australian banking sector accelerated in the early 1980s. A stocktake of deregulation has been completed in the context of the Wallis Report (March 1997)(1). The existing laws and industry codes are found in the following three-tiered system:

Commonwealth

There is prudential supervision and licensing of banks by the Commonwealth pursuant to the Banking Act 1959. 'Prudential supervision' involves examination by the Reserve Bank of an individual bank's management of its financial risks to ensure that the bank's practices limit its risks to prudent levels. The prime responsibility for the prudent management of a bank rests with the bank's internal management and its board of directors. From time to time, the Reserve Bank issues public statements on aspects of its prudential supervision of banks. The statements cover such things as ownership and control of banks, capital and liquidity requirements, credit exposures and off balance sheet business, funds management and securitisation, associations with non-bank entities and access to the payments system.

The provisions of the Commonwealth's Trade Practices Act 1974 also apply.

State and Territory

There is consumer credit regulation under the State and Territory laws which constitute the national Consumer Credit Code. The laws are based on the principle of truth-in-lending and they enable borrowers involved with banks and other financial institutions (and, subject to some exceptions, the Code also applies to those who provide credit in the course of a business) to make informed decisions. As from 1 November 1996, most bank customers with loan accounts, overdrafts and those involved with the general day-to-day credit transactions (for personal, domestic or household purposes) may look to the State-based Code for possible consumer protection. The Code covers disclosure of credit fees and charges and interest on loans. Certain credit facilities which existed prior to 1 November 1996 are not covered, unless there is agreement between the parties to increase the amount of credit.

Banking Industry

The banking industry has developed a Code of Banking Practice. The Code is intended to have contractual force. The Code was developed by member banks of the Australian Bankers' Association in conjunction with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and the Federal Treasury. The Code covers individuals who acquire banking services wholly and exclusively for private or domestic use. The Code is subject to Commonwealth, State and Territory law and is also to be read subject to the Electronic Funds Transfer Code of Conduct. The Code of Banking Practice fosters the establishment within banks of internal dispute resolution processes for customers and where a dispute is not resolved, free referral to the Australian Banking Industry Ombudsman's Office (freecall 1800 337 444). This scheme covers virtually all retail banks. The scheme covers disputes where the amount in dispute (not the loan or deposit size) is $150,000 or less. Disputes involving incorporated businesses are outside the Ombudsman's charter.

In addition to the above there is the long history of banking law based on decided cases involving banker and customer. This relationship is normally contractual in nature and invokes both common law and statutory provisions. It is also a relationship which can give rise to legal issues of confidentiality and trust.

There are over 16.5 million bank customers in Australia (2) and the majority of transactions involve the banker-customer relationship which is central to the contractual nature of banking law. A fundamental prerequisite for the banker-customer relationship is the existence of a bank account.

The majority of disputes between banks and customers are resolved by the parties, or with the involvement of the Banking Ombudsman (a non-government, industry self-regulatory scheme). Legal disputes are usually a matter for State Courts and Tribunals.

As already noted, confidentiality is an important principle in the banker-customer relationship and it imposes a common law duty on bankers to maintain that confidentiality. Credit reporting by a bank is permissible but it is subject to the Commonwealth's Privacy Act 1988 and the Credit Reporting Code of Conduct. Banks are required, by law, to comply with the Commonwealth's Financial Transactions Report Act 1988 which requires proper identification of customers opening an account (100 points test), and the reporting of significant cash transactions ($10,000 or more), and of suspect transactions.

Protection of Depositors

Prudential supervision by the Reserve Bank enables it to investigate the affairs of a bank, if that bank is in serious financial difficulty. The Reserve Bank may assume control of the business of the bank until the deposits have been repaid. The depositor protection provisions of the Banking Act 1959 do not constitute a formal guarantee of depositors' funds. The Wallis Report recommended that the protection provisions in the Banking Act 1959 be further clarified so that it is very clear to the public that the protection of depositors' accounts does not extend to a guarantee over deposits.

Taxes: FIDs and BADs: Income Tax Withholding Charge on Interest

Financial institution duties (FIDs) are levied under State and Territory laws. The bank account debits tax (BADs or 'debits tax') was introduced by the Commonwealth in April 1983 but the administration of the tax was transferred to the States and Territories in January 1994.(3)

Income tax is the only relevant Commonwealth tax on bank accounts. It increases to the highest marginal rate where a tax file number has not been notified.

FIDs and debits tax can exceed bank fees and charges but the increasing application of bank charges vis-a-vis absolute profit levels achieved by banks has drawn criticism from some consumer groups in recent times. The Reserve Bank and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission constantly monitor changes in relation to bank fees on an informal basis. A Prices Surveillance Authority (PSA) report in 1995 on an investigation into bank fees and charges rejected calls by consumer groups for banks to offer free accounts for low-income earners. The PSA did, however, recommend that banks consider restructuring their fees with an emphasis on transactions rather than fixed account-keeping fees.(4)

Interest Rates

Prior to deregulation, banks' lending and deposit rates were subject to control by the Reserve Bank, with the approval of the Treasurer. Since deregulation, controls on interest rates are no longer used.(5)

Banks' interest rates are influenced by movements in money market rates and competitive pressures. The Reserve Bank operates in the short-term money market to influence the cash rate (the rate paid on unsecured overnight loans of cash), which, in turn, impacts on lending and deposit rates. Fixed-rate loan and deposit rates tend to move in line with security yields.

A bank's right to charge interest is derived from the banker-customer relationship and banking practice.

Endnotes

  1. Financial System Inquiry Final Report, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, March 1997.

  2. Weerasooria, W. Banking Law and the Financial System in Australia, Butterworths, Sydney, 1996: 309. Most of the outline in this Research Note has been drawn from this text.

  3. Qld does not have a FID. ACT does not have a debits tax (as yet).

  4. Prices Surveillance Authority, Inquiry Into Fees and Charges Imposed on Retail Accounts by Banks and Other Financial Institutions nd y Retailers on EFTPOS Transactions, Matter No. PI/95/2, Report No. 65, 30 June 1995.

  5. The power to control interest rates remains at s. 50 of the Banking Act 1959.

Acknowledgment

The author acknowledges the assistance of the Reserve Bank of Australia in commenting on the draft of this Research Note.

 

top