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The Wallis Report on the Australian Financial System: Summary and Critique
Phil Hanratty
Economics, Commerce and Industrial Relations Group
23 June 1997
Contents
Major Issues Summary
Introduction
Summary of Part One: Forces for Change
Chapter One: Changing Customer Needs
Chapter Two: Technology Driven Innovation
Chapter Three: Regulation as a Driver of Change
Chapter Four: The Changing Financial Landscape
Summary of Part Two: Key Issues in Regulatory Reform
Chapter Five: Philosophy of Financial Regulation
Chapter Six: Cost and Efficiency
Chapter Seven: Conduct and Disclosure
Chapter Eight: Financial Safety
Chapter Nine: Stability and Payments
Chapter Ten: Mergers and Acquisitions
Chapter Eleven: Promoting Increased Efficiency
Chapter Twelve: Coordination and Accountability
Chapter Thirteen: Managing Change
Summary of Part Three: Stocktake of Financial Deregulation
Chapter Fourteen: Stocktake, Historical Perspective
Chapter Fifteen: Stocktake, The Financial System
Chapter Sixteen: Stocktake, Financial Regulation
Chapter Seventeen: Stocktake, The Economy
Critique of the Report: Some Opposing Policy Arguments
Consumer Protection
The Mega Prudential Regulator
Separating Prudential Regulation from the RBA
Fees and Charges
Access Points to Financial Institutions
The Six Pillars Policy
Foreign Ownership
Deposit Insurance
Appendix: Recommendations of the Wallis Report
Conduct and Disclosure
Financial Safety
Stability and Payments
Mergers and Acquisitions
Promoting Increased Efficiency
Coordination and Accountability
Managing Change
Endnotes
Abbreviations
- ACCC
- Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
- AFIC
- Australian Financial Institutions Commission
- APRC
- Australian Prudential Regulation Commission
- APSC
- Australian Payments System Council
- ASC
- Australian Securities Commission
- ATM
- Automatic Teller Machine
- BBP
- Basic Banking Product
- CFSC
- Corporations and Financial Services Commission
- DTI
- Deposit Taking Institution
- EFTPOS
- Electronic Funds Transfer/Point of Sale
- ESA
- Exchange Settlement Account
- ISC
- Insurance and Superannuation Commission
- NBFI
- Non Bank Financial Institution
- OTC
- Over the Counter
- PSB
- Payments System Board
- RBA
- Reserve Bank of Australia
- RTGS
- Real Time Gross Settlement
- SME
- Small and Medium Enterprise
The Wallis Report has proposed that some fundamental changes be made
to financial regulatory arrangements in order to increase the efficiency
and effectiveness of the system and build upon the existing achievements
of financial deregulation. The Australian financial system is experiencing
ongoing change in response to changing customer needs, new technology
and other economic policy reforms. It is argued that financial regulatory
reform will allow the financial sector to better respond to these pressures.
It is recommended that a Corporations and Financial Services Commission
(CFSC) be formed to provide Commonwealth regulation of corporations, financial
market integrity and financial consumer protection. The current regulatory
structure in these areas is argued to be inconsistent with the broadening
direction of markets, has resulted in inefficiencies, inconsistencies
and regulatory gaps, and is not conducive to competition in the financial
system. The new structure will help to overcome these problems.
The Australian Securities Commission (ASC) would be abolished and its
current functions folded into the CFSC, while the administration of financial
consumer protection would be taken away from the Australian Competition
and Consumer Commission (ACCC) and placed with the CFSC. Some functions
of the Insurance and Superannuation Commission (ISC) would also be incorporated
into the CFSC. The CFSC should have powers provided by legislation which
are commensurate with its responsibilities.
It is also recommended that a single prudential regulator, the Australian
Prudential Regulation Commission (APRC), be formed for the entire financial
system to provide integrated and consistent supervision of financial institutions
for safety purposes. A single prudential regulator offers regulatory neutrality,
greater efficiency and responsiveness, greater resource flexibility, economies
of scale and lower costs in regulation, and more flexibility to cope with
likely future changes in the financial system.
Bank supervision would be taken away from the Reserve Bank of Australia
(RBA) and given to the APRC, while the supervision of building societies
and credit unions, now done by the state-based Australian Financial Institutions
Commission (AFIC), would also be incorporated into APRC, as would the
remaining functions of the ISC. However, the APRC would have a close cooperative
relationship with the RBA, with RBA officers having places on the APRC
Board. The APRC should have powers provided by legislation which are commensurate
with its responsibilities.
In regard to the failure of financial institutions, it is recommended
that the depositor protection mechanism which currently applies to banks
be extended to all deposit taking institutions under APRC regulation.
Here, depositors have priority over other stakeholders in the disposition
of remaining assets of the institution after liquidation. Explicit deposit
insurance schemes do not seem to be practicable or workable. Existing
forms of prudential regulation, such as capital and liquidity requirements,
should continue to operate.
It is proposed that the Trade Practices Act continue to apply to the
financial system and that the ACCC be the sole competition policy arbiter
on mergers and acquisitions in the sector. The current 'six pillars' policy,
prohibiting mergers between the four largest banks and two largest life
offices, should be abolished and such decisions left in the hands of the
ACCC. It is not possible to say much of any value about merger proposals
in the abstract and each requires its own particular examination.
It is recommended that the blanket prohibition on foreign takeovers
of the four largest banks be lifted and that proposed foreign investments
in the financial system be reviewed in terms of the general guidelines
of the Government's direct foreign investment policy. While large scale
transfer of ownership of the financial system into foreign hands would
be contrary to the national interest, because it would restrict options
about the future development of the financial system, it is argued that
some increase in foreign ownership could bring benefits such as injections
of new capital, access to new skills and technologies and enhanced competitive
pressures in domestic financial markets.
It is argued that the widespread existence of cross-subsidies between
products, channels and customer groups reduces efficiency in the financial
system by creating divergences between costs and prices. Such cross-subsidies
can be unwound by allowing institutions full freedom to set fees and charges
on their services and products according to cost-relevant criteria. It
is therefore argued that governments should not intervene in, or otherwise
try to influence, this process. Other ways should be sought, such as through
the tax/ transfer payments system, to provide low cost transaction services
to groups such as social security recipients.
Financial regulatory agencies should have operational autonomy to pursues
their legislated objectives in the most efficient and cost effective manner
possible. They should finance their operational costs through levies upon
the institutions they supervise.
It is proposed that a Financial Sector Advisory Council be formed to
advise on regulatory arrangements and other matters, while the RBA, APRC
and CFSC should constitute a renamed Council of Financial Regulators to
facilitate cooperation across the full range of regulatory matters. It
is argued that further amalgamation of these three agencies would be unnecessary
and counterproductive at this time.
Many of the Report's recommendations can be, and have been, challenged.
First, the proposed formation of the CFSC might be challenged on the grounds
that it entails removing the administration of financial consumer protection
from the ACCC. It could be argued that this policy change will create
disparities in consumer protection with the rest of the economy, because
of the tendency for the industry-specific CFSC to come under 'undue' influence
from the finance sector. If this occurred it could be viewed as both unfair
and likely to generate some loss of economic efficiency.
Second, it could be argued that the formation of a single prudential
regulator for the entire financial sector, the APRC, will reduce the effectiveness
and efficiency of prudential regulation. It is argued that this will arise
because of the size and complexity of the regulatory task set for the
APRC. The proposed single prudential regulator might also be criticised
on the grounds that it will encourage non-deposit institutions, and their
customers, to increase their risk exposures in the belief, albeit mistaken,
that Commonwealth Government protection for bank deposits has been extended
to other financial assets.
Third, separating prudential regulation from the RBA might be challenged
on the grounds that it might dangerously slow down the provision of emergency
loan assistance to institutions in times of distress, since such assistance
would, under the Report's proposals, require mutual agreement and coordination
between the APRC and the RBA. Separation might also be criticised for
closing off the option of the coordinated deployment of monetary policy
and prudential policy instruments.
Fourth, it could be argued that the Report's advocacy of more efficient
pricing of fees and charges by financial institutions clashes with equity
concerns about the rights of citizens to the provision of 'basic banking
services', especially for low-income, low-wealth customers. If compensation
through the tax/ transfer payment system is not implemented, then legislation
to ensure the continued provision of such services might be argued to
be warranted. Similarly, it could be argued that the community has rights
of access to financial institutions which should constrain the ongoing
rationalisation of the distribution channels of financial institutions.
Thus, it could be argued that the Commonwealth Government should ensure
that the geographical coverage and range of type of access does not fall
below some minimum limits.
Fifth, it could be argued that the issue of mergers between the four
largest banks is of such national importance that it justifies the continuation
of explicit Commonwealth restrictions in this area. The Commonwealth Government
has already announced such a position.
Sixth, the Report's rather ambivalent attitude towards direct foreign
investment in the finance sector might be criticised on the grounds that
it sits very oddly with concerns with increasing financial sector efficiency
and does not explicitly deal with current issues such as the role of foreign
bank branches in Australia. As an alternative, it could be argued that
one strength of explicit deposit insurance schemes is that they facilitate
a better role for such branch operations. Well-designed deposit insurance
schemes might also generate efficiency, equity and safety gains in the
finance sector. It could be argued that these issues were not adequately
discussed in the Report.
Australia has a long history of conducting public inquiries into its
financial system. The Campbell Committee reported in 1981 and advocated
substantial financial deregulation.(1) Their Report's conclusions were
largely validated by the Martin Review Report of 1983.(2) Financial deregulation,
and its impact on banking, was reviewed by the House of Representatives
Standing Committee on Finance and Public Administration (the Martin Committee)
in 1991.(3) In the same year, the Industry Commission examined the financial
system in terms of the availability of capital for investment.(4) Now,
the Wallis Committee has published its own review of financial deregulation
and of ways to build upon past achievements through further regulatory
reform.(5)
This paper provides a concise summary of the arguments and recommendations
of the Wallis Report using, wherever possible, the actual language and
sentences of the Report. All 115 recommendations of the Report are mentioned
and each of its chapters is summarised individually. In order to fully
and fairly cover the debate on the policy changes advocated by the Report,
the paper concludes with a survey of arguments opposing some of the key
conclusions and recommendations of the Report.
Chapter One: Changing Customer Needs
Changing customer needs are helping to reshape the financial system
by influencing choices on distribution channels, financial products and
financial suppliers. In turn, such needs have been primarily influenced
by changes in demographic structure, work patterns, the financial assets
and liabilities of households, awareness of value and willingness to adopt
new technology.
The Australian population is ageing. This increases the importance of
assets to fund consumption in retirement. The Commonwealth Government
has sought, through superannuation initiatives, to encourage private asset
accumulation and thus to encourage reduced dependence upon the age pension
in retirement. This has led to a shift in household financial assets into
market-linked investments, meaning that households are bearing more investment
risk than in the past. Improved financial advisory services and increased
efficiency in funds management are thus required.
The number of people working extended hours continues to increase. Thus,
many people may now have less leisure time and less time available to
manage their financial affairs. Such people will have a greater need for
financial products which offer convenience and ease of access. At the
same time, many consumers will experience greater variability in the timing
of income. Those spending longer periods in education, those in part-time
employment, the unemployed and those in early retirement will generate
a greater need for financial products which smooth cash flows and spending
over their life cycles.
Households continue to accumulate both assets and liabilities. Thus,
households now rely more on the financial system and have greater exposure
to financial institutions. They will be more concerned with issues of
financial efficiency and safety. Those with greater net financial wealth
will tend to shift their assets towards more risky, higher return products
such as holdings of market-linked investments. Consumers are becoming
increasingly aware of value for money in financial products and services.
Information sources on the financial system have proliferated. Rising
fees and charges on transactions services have increased customer value
awareness. The rising range of housing loan products has encouraged consumers
to shop around for the best deal. There is also an increased willingness
to take up new technologies providing financial services. This is related
to increased familiarity with the new technologies in the workplace and
in the home.
Chapter Two: Technology Driven Innovation
Improvements in communications infrastructure and technology are breaking
down physical constraints and cost barriers to the transmission, storage
and use of information. Information networks are expanding rapidly. Pressures
for standardisation, interoperability, ease of use and cost effectiveness
are increasing. Enhanced authentication of users and more secure transmission
of information will accelerate network use.
Electronic channels for payments and financial service delivery are
increasingly taking advantage of networks. The expansion of Automatic
Teller Machines (ATMs) and Electronic Funds Transfer/ Point of Sale (EFTPOS)
access points have generated a large shift towards electronic retail transactions
and away from reliance upon access to the branches of financial institutions.
Telephone banking is also encouraging such trends. Once security is improved,
the conduct of financial transactions through the Internet will expand
rapidly. Operating costs per transaction are much lower through these
new electronic mediums.
Figure 1: Percentage of Transactions using Specific
Financial Channels in September 1996
Note: Base = Volume of Transactions/visits, September 1996.
Source: Data provided to the Wallis Inquiry by Roy Morgan Research.
Risk assessment relating to financial products has become much more
sophisticated through advanced data analysis capabilities made possible
by technological advances. Technology has profoundly influenced the conduct
of financial markets and exchanges. Organised markets and exchanges are
facing competition from the availability of information and trading systems
which threaten the value of their business. Organisations standing between
the customer and the ultimate supplier of financial services must increasingly
justify their value in the delivery process.
Chapter Three: Regulation as a Driver of Change
Changes in regulation have strongly affected the financial sector. The
four most important policy changes have been the liberalisation of trade
and capital flows, the development of compulsory superannuation, the removal
of direct government participation in the financial services industry,
and changes to taxation.
Economic globalisation is proceeding apace. Markets are becoming more
internationally integrated and the economies of different nations are
becoming more interdependent. These trends have been partly due to technological
advances and broadening planning horizons of firms and investors. They
have been also much assisted in the case of Australia by policy relaxations
such as the lifting of restrictions on outward investment by Australian
companies, the floating of the Australian dollar and the abolition of
exchange controls, the liberalisation of restrictions on inward direct
foreign investment, and the progressive opening of the Australian banking
system to foreign banks.
The development of compulsory superannuation contributions has led to
the rapid growth in aggregate assets in superannuation funds. The great
bulk of these have been invested in more risky market-linked assets rather
than in capital guaranteed assets on the balance sheets of financial intermediaries.
In recent years the Commonwealth and State governments have corporatised
and then privatised many of their financial enterprises. This has been
motivated by the desire of governments to exit commercial businesses (including
non-financial enterprises) to ensure that competitive neutrality is achieved
in those markets, and has also been prompted by losses in certain state-government-owned
businesses and the resultant burden on their taxpayers.
Taxation arrangements in Australia, like those in many other countries,
contain a wide range of economic distortions. Taxation has been a key
factor in the creation of legal and organisational structures specifically
designed to minimise taxation liability. Progress has been made in reducing
distortions in some areas but many remain. Variations in effective taxation
rates across assets and saving vehicles remain substantial, while the
rates and scope of transaction taxes also distort financial flows.
Chapter Four: The Changing Financial Landscape
The financial system has undergone, and will continue to undergo, four
central types of structural change. There is an increased focus upon efficiency
and competition, globalisation of financial markets is continuing, financial
market widening and the development of financial 'conglomerates' has arisen,
and there has been a further shift from financial institutions to direct
connections between capital suppliers and final users, through financial
markets.
Financial institutions have improved their ability to identify costs
and profits entailed in the products and services they offer. The use
of customer and product profitability models allows institutions to price
products and services more accurately. As these methods come to be more
widely used, they will combine with enhanced competition to generate pricing
which more accurately reflects the underlying cost of supply, thus raising
the economic efficiency of the financial sector. Specialist financial
providers have overcome barriers to entry in the most profitable financial
markets and have thus intensified competition in these areas. Such intensified
competition has increased pressure to abandon inefficient pricing in other
financial services which have been traditionally used to 'cross-subsidise'
other products. More efficient pricing will encourage consumers to use
lower-cost channels of access to products and services, thus reinforcing
the trend to greater efficiency in the financial system.
Australian markets have become increasingly global over the last decade
and now have a relatively high level of integration with international
markets. Australian businesses and markets have responded in four ways.
Fundraising by corporations and institutions is becoming increasingly
global. Foreign inward and outward investment are both growing. Trading
on share, bond and foreign exchange markets is becoming increasingly more
international. The location decisions of many financial services corporations
reflect an increasingly international perspective. However, at this stage
the globalisation of retail financial services is still relatively undeveloped.
Increased globalisation intensifies competition for domestic financial
suppliers, increases pressures for rationalisation and international harmonisation
of financial regulation in Australia, and heightens the exposure of Australia
to world financial trends and shocks.
The Australian financial system is already predominantly composed of
financial conglomerates. These are groups of companies under common control
whose predominant activities consist of providing at least two different
classes of financial services. For example, many Australian banks have
operations in funds management and insurance. Underlying trends are resulting
in conglomerates which focus on a wider spectrum of activities. Heightened
competition is encouraging a reconfiguration of conglomerates to achieve
more cost efficient structures. Conglomeration is also assisted by product
innovation where products are designed to be offered by a range of financial
entities, and by commercial strategies of 'bundling' of financial products
across traditional market boundaries.
Financial markets are increasingly challenging financial intermediaries
for the provision of finance and the management of risk. Large corporations
have had direct access to financial markets, for debt and equity fundraising,
for some time. Developments in 'securitisation' (the bundling of loan
assets and their sale as marketable securities) now allow markets to provide
finance to retail borrowers. An increasing range of risks can be managed
through an array of market-based 'derivative' financial instruments (e.g.
options, swaps and futures contracts), while the needs of savers are also
increasingly being met through financial market products. Financial intermediaries
will continue to perform an important role in meeting the financial needs
of their clients but the form of their participation is likely to change.
Chapter Five: Philosophy of Financial Regulation
Regulation of all markets for goods and services can be categorised
according to three broad purposes. First, regulation is to help ensure
that markets work efficiently and competitively, and thus to overcome
sources of market failure. Second, regulation can prescribe particular
standards or qualities of service, especially where the consumption of
goods and services carries risks, so that safety is a focus of concern.
Third, regulation can help achieve social objectives such as, for example,
'community service obligations' which typically take the form of price
controls.
More particularly, general financial system regulation can be motivated
by four considerations. Financial market integrity regulation aims to
promote confidence in the efficiency and fairness of markets. Financial
market prices can be sensitive to information and this raises the potential
for misuse of information. For this reason regulators impose specific
disclosure rules (such as prospectus rules) and conduct rules (such as
prohibitions on insider trading) on financial market participants. Consumer
financial protection arises from the complexity of financial products
and the consequent scope for deception, misunderstanding and dispute.
Competition regulation of financial markets arises from concerns over
the anti-competitive effects of market concentration and collusion between
financial market participants.
A case for regulation also arises from the risks attached to financial
promises (such as the promise to repay borrowed funds). As a general principle,
financial regulation for safety purposes will be required where promises
are judged to be very difficult to honour, difficult to assess, and likely
to produce highly adverse consequence if breached. Financial promises
which rank high on all three characteristics (e.g. promises to repay retail
deposits) are called 'high intensity' promises.
In markets for intense financial promises, two sources of market failure
have long been recognised. First, there is the risk of third party losses
due to systemic instability. The most potent source of the risk of systemic
instability is financial contagion, where financial distress in one market
or institution is communicated to others and eventually engulfs the entire
system through a general loss of confidence. Second, there is the problem
of information asymmetry facing most consumers, which means that they
cannot reliably assess risk, particularly the creditworthiness of the
financial promisor.
Financial regulation for safety purposes is called 'prudential regulation'
and is intended to prevent the emergence of problems which threaten the
viability of financial institutions. Once such problems have emerged,
the task falls to the central bank and government to restore stability
through the provision of liquidity and other policies.
Overall, it should be noted that there are five broad principles of
good financial regulation. First, competitive neutrality requires that
regulation apply equally and to all who make particular financial commitments.
It further requires that there be minimal barriers to entry and exit from
markets and products, that there be no undue restrictions on institutions
or the products they offer, and that markets be open to the widest possible
range of participants.
Second, cost effectiveness requires that regulation be no more onerous
than necessary to achieve its goals, minimise overlap and duplication
and conflict amongst regulators, properly balance efficiency and effectiveness,
distinguish the goals of financial regulation from broader social objectives,
and allocate regulatory costs to those enjoying its benefits.
Third, transparency of regulation requires that all government guarantees
be made explicit and that all purchasers and providers of financial services
be fully aware of their rights and responsibilities. Fourth, flexibility
requires that the regulatory framework must be able to adapt and cope
with changing institutional and product structures without losing effectiveness.
Fifth, accountability requires that regulatory agencies operate independently
of sectional interests, be subject to regular reviews and evaluations
and be open to scrutiny by their stakeholders.
Chapter Six: Cost and Efficiency
It is estimated that in 1995 the total cost to users of the Australian
financial system was about $41 billion. This is more than the residential
construction sector or the costs of the entire retail sector. Banks made
up about $22 billion of these financial system costs.
In general, significant improvements should be able to be achieved through
the removal of inefficient regulation and the enhancement of competition
in financial markets; these required reforms are discussed in later chapters.
In regard to the banking system, where potential improvements are estimated
to be large, most of the efficiency and cost reduction gains can be achieved
by changing the mix of transaction channels in favour of electronic transactions,
by reducing the density of the branch network and by using more differentiated
branch formats (e.g. kiosks versus full branches).
Figure 2: Bank Branch Density
Note: The range of included institutions may vary slightly due to national
differences in classification. Figures for Australia include banks and
building societies.
Source: Bank of International Settlements, 1996, 66th Annual Report;
KPMG 1996, New Zealand Financial Institutions Performance Survey.
In regard to insurance, where potential improvements are estimated to
be of medium magnitude, while there is scope to improve the cost structures
of individual insurance companies, this is best achieved through competition
rather than through regulation. In regard to the funds management industry,
where potential improvements are estimated to be large, regulation and
taxation rules have contributed to its high cost levels by creating barriers
to foreign entry and by failing to encourage the consolidation of the
fragmented superannuation industry. Further unnecessary cost is added
by the lack of low-cost distribution channels.
The costs of the payments system, where potential improvements are also
estimated to be large, are driven directly by the frequency of use of
different instruments and by the proportion of electronic transactions.
Despite the rapid uptake of some forms of electronic payments instruments
such as EFTPOS, Australia still depends heavily on cheques. As a result,
total payments system costs are relatively high by international standards,
constituting between $5 billion and $7.5 billion annually.
Figure 3: Automatic Teller Machine (ATM) and EFTPOS Penetration
(1995)
Note: Not all systems have the same functionality (e.g. on-line capabilities)
as those in Australia.
Source: Bank of International Settlements, 1996, Statistics on the
Payments Systems in the Group of Ten Countries, RBA and APCA (unpublished
data).
Chapter Seven: Conduct and Disclosure
Financial markets cannot work well unless participants act with integrity,
to ensure mutual trust, and unless there is adequate disclosure to facilitate
informed judgements. Regulation is necessary to ensure that these conditions
hold. Market integrity regulation seeks to ensure that markets are sound,
orderly and transparent, users are treated fairly, the price formation
process is reliable and markets are free from misleading, manipulative
or abusive conduct. Consumer protection regulation seeks to ensure that
retail customers have adequate information, are treated fairly and have
adequate avenues for redress.
Such conduct and disclosure regulation is currently undertaken by several
Commonwealth agencies, such as the Insurance and Superannuation Commission
(ISC), the Australian Securities Commission (ASC), the Australian Competition
and Consumer Commission (ACCC), and the Australian Payments System Council
(APSC). Most such regulation is based on the institutional form of the
service provider, although market integrity regulation is conducted on
a functional basis by one agency alone, the ASC. This regulatory structure
is inconsistent with the broadening structure of markets, has resulted
in inefficiencies, inconsistencies and regulatory gaps, and is not conducive
to competition in the financial system.
In order to overcome these problems, it is recommended that a single
agency, the Corporations and Financial Services Commission (CFSC), should
be established to provide Commonwealth regulation of corporations, financial
market integrity and financial consumer protection. It should combine
the existing market integrity, corporations and consumer protection roles
of the ASC, ISC and APSC. The tasks of these three roles are more complementary
than conflicting. The CFSC should take over the administration of consumer
protection in the financial system from the ACCC, and especially monitor
the use of new technology in relation to consumer protection. On the other
hand, the States and Territories should retain and review their consumer
credit laws.
The CFSC should have powers to use a combination of regulatory approaches.
In addition to its framework legislation, the CFSC should have the power
to adopt detailed codes which prescribe appropriate conduct and disclosure
in particular industries or to allow the industry to develop such codes.
Given these broad powers, the CFSC should have the discretion to decide
the best approach to regulation to be used in particular circumstances.
The CFSC should have an explicit mandate to balance the efficiency and
effectiveness of its regulatory approaches.
It is recommended that a number of specific current regulatory practices
also be reformed. Disclosure requirements for retail financial products
should be reviewed by the CFSC to ensure that they provide information
that enables comparison between products. The disclosure codes of conduct
applying to banking, building societies and credit unions should be made
consistent wherever possible, while 'due diligence' defences should apply
to positive disclosure requirements. As well, the law should be amended
to require the issue of succinct profile statements about offers of retail
financial products, including initial public offers. In order to avoid
information overload for consumers, the CFSC should encourage shorter
prospectuses where applicable. Financial institutions' financial reports
should meet both Corporations Law and prudential supervision requirements,
while the accounting standards of financial institutions should be harmonised
with international standards.
The CFSC should establish a single regime to license advisers providing
investment advice and dealing in financial markets. There should be separate
categories of licence for investment advice and product sales, general
insurance brokers, financial market dealers, and financial market participants.
However, the CFSC should have power to delegate accreditation responsibilities
to industry bodies.
On the other hand, the CFSC should develop a single set of requirements
for investment sales and advice concerning minimum standards of competency
and ethical behaviour, the disclosure of fees and adviser's capacity,
rules on handling client property and money, financial resources or insurance
available in cases of fraud or incompetence, and responsibilities for
agents and employees. In particular, real estate agents providing investment
advice should be required to hold a financial advisory licence unless
a review clearly indicates otherwise. However, professional advisers,
such as accountants and lawyers, should not be required to hold a financial
advisory licence if they provide investment advice only incidentally to
their other business and rebate any commissions to clients. Additional
prudential regulation of financial market licence holders is not required
at this time.
Broader regulation of 'financial products' should replace current, less
flexible, securities and futures law. The CFSC should authorise financial
exchanges (such as the Stock Exchange and the Futures Exchange) under
a single regime, while the ACCC and the CFSC should coordinate their examination
of exchange rules. The regulation of exchanges should not be excessive
compared with Over-the-Counter (OTC) markets which involve more specialised
transactions between buyers and sellers. In particular, prohibitions on
retail participation in OTC derivative markets should be discontinued.
OTC markets may be conducted by appropriately licensed financial market
dealers, while exchange clearing houses should be appropriately authorised.
A central national gateway for dispute resolution for all consumers of
retail financial services and products should be established.
Overall, the CFSC should have broad enforcement powers and resources
which are adequate for carrying out its responsibilities. In particular,
it should have adequate powers over investigations, protection from liability
for those providing regulatory assistance, the imposition of administrative
sanctions such as disqualification and banning orders, the initiation
of civil actions in the courts, and the referral of matters to the Director
of Public Prosecutions for criminal prosecution. The CFSC should also
participate in global regulatory programs to provide consumer protection
for cross-border financial transactions.
Chapter Eight: Financial Safety
Financial safety is fundamental to the smooth operation of the economic
system. Government intervention through prudential regulation provides
an added level of financial safety beyond that provided by conduct and
disclosure regulation. The intensity of prudential regulation should be
proportional to the degree of market failure it addresses, but it should
not involve a government guarantee of any part of the financial system.
The current framework for prudential regulation is institutionally based,
with separate agencies regulating the activities of each class of institution.
The Reserve Bank Australia (RBA) covers banks and the payments settlement,
the ISC covers life and general insurance and superannuation, while the
state-based Financial Institutions Scheme, coordinated by the Australian
Financial Institutions Commission (AFIC) covers credit unions, building
societies and, it is expected, friendly societies from 1 July, 1997.
Prudential regulation should be imposed on institutions licensed to
conduct the general business of deposit taking from the public, or offering
capital backed life products, general insurance products or superannuation
investments. A single Commonwealth agency, the Australian Prudential Regulation
Commission (APRC), should be established to carry out regulation for all
these products. That is, it should conduct prudential regulation throughout
the financial system. The APRC should be separate from, but cooperate
closely with, the RBA.
A single prudential regulator offers regulatory neutrality and greater
efficiency and responsiveness, provides a sounder basis for regulating
conglomerates, offers the prospect of greater resource flexibility and
economies of scale in regulation that should enhance the cost effectiveness
of regulation, and provides the flexibility and breadth of vision to cope
with changes that seem likely to occur in the financial system in the
coming years.
Separating the prudential regulator from the RBA recognises the supervision
functions for non-bank institutions which the regulator will be taking
on, clarifies the nature of the assurance provided by prudential regulation
to customers of financial institutions, and enables each organisation
to focus clearly on its primary responsibilities and clarifies the lines
of accountability for their regulatory tasks. It also removes a potential
conflict of interest for the regulator in cases where institutions require
emergency liquidity assistance and the prudential regulator might be too
willing to provide it in order to bolster its own reputation for preventing
institutional failure. Allowing this function to remain with the RBA,
as is recommended, avoids this problem.
However, the RBA should have three ex-officio members on the APRC Board,
and provision should also be made for full information exchange between
the RBA and the APRC and for RBA participation in APRC teams inspecting
financial institutions. The RBA should retain responsibility for reporting
under the Financial Institutions Act 1974. A bilateral operational
coordination committee should be established between the RBA and the APRC.
The three financial system regulators-the RBA, CFSC and APRC- should also
continue to pursue operational cooperation through a joint council chaired
by the RBA. This is discussed in a later chapter.
The APRC should be empowered under legislation to enforce prudential
regulations on any licensed or approved financial entity. Unlicensed entities
would be prohibited from offering financial products for which approval
had not been given. Licenses could be revoked or made conditional on certain
courses of action. However, the intensity of prudential regulation needs
to balance financial safety with consideration of its possible adverse
effects upon efficiency, competition, innovation and competitive neutrality.
This balance should preserve a spectrum of market risk-and-return choices
for retail investors, thus meeting their differing needs and preferences.
Prudential regulation of all licensed Deposit-Taking Institutions (DTIs)
should be consistent with standards approved by the Basle Committee of
Banking Supervision and should aim to ensure that the risk of loss of
depositors' funds is remote. Quantitative prudential requirements such
as capital adequacy, liquidity requirements and large exposure limits
should apply. Regular on-site reviews of risk management systems should
form an integral part of the approach to prudential regulation.
The APRC should be responsible for the licensing of all DTIs subject
to prudential regulation. Only those entities which meet minimum capital
requirements and hold an exchange settlement account (ESA) with the RBA
should be entitled to use the name 'bank', while only those entities which
are mutually owned (where each depositor has an equal share of ownership)
should be entitled to use the names 'credit union', 'credit society' or
'mutual'. Any licensed DTI should be entitled to use the name 'building
society' and licensed DTIs should be entitled to use any other business
names provided they are not, in the view of the APRC, misleading to depositors.
Deposit taking by unlicensed entities (such as finance companies) should
be subject to the fundraising provisions of the Corporations Law
and be regulated by the CFSC.
The APRC should regulate life companies and general insurers, while
the regulation of friendly societies should be shared between the CFSC
and the APRC. The APRC should regulate superannuation in accordance with
retirement objectives, while other APRC regulated institutions should
have the right to offer Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs). However, 'excluded'
superannuation funds (with less than 5 members) should be exempt from
APRC regulation. Overall, the APRC should promote transparent disclosure
of institutional activities and performance in order to strengthen risk
assessment by customers and shareholders.
The general principle of a wide spread of ownership of regulated financial
entities (or holding companies where part of a conglomerate) should be
retained. This protects against undue influence by a major shareholder
and also guards against contagion risk that may otherwise occur if a financial
institution is damaged by adverse changes in the fortunes of its major
shareholder. Existing legislation and rules should be streamlined through
the introduction of a single Acquisitions Act with a common 15%
shareholding limit. The APRC should have power to approve, subject to
prudential requirements, an exemption allowing an existing licence holder
to acquire more than 15% of an institution. Any other person may acquire
more than 15% of a licensed institution only if the Treasurer approves
the acquisition in the national interest.
Current policy generally requires the separation of the ownership of
DTIs and life companies from other sectors of the economy. This is justified
principally on the basis of the need to ensure that the safety of the
financial sector is not compromised by the influence or fortunes of other
entities. The general principle of separation of regulated financial activities
from other activities should be retained but applied with greater flexibility
than at present. Mutual entities should be permitted to hold all classes
of licences. New applicants for licences are currently required to meet
certain capital requirements. In general, these should be retained but
the APRC should be flexible in granting exemptions under some circumstances.
Financial conglomerates raise the issue of the most appropriate legal
structure in which they should operate. It is recommended that, subject
to a financial conglomerate meeting prudential requirements, the APRC
should permit adoption of a non-operating holding company structure. The
structure must satisfy the APRC in the areas of capital management, adequacy
of firewalls, reporting of intra-group activities and independent board
representation on subsidiary entities. A conglomerate should not be prohibited
from obtaining a number of classes of licences or conducting non-regulated
financial activities. The APRC should have clear powers to verify intra-group
exposures and otherwise satisfy itself as to the adequacy of the separation
of the regulated financial entity from other financial operations of the
group.
Turning to some other financial entities, fundraising by money market
corporations and finance companies should be subject to CFSC surveillance
but not APRC regulation.
Finally, in regard to dealing with the failure of financial institutions,
the depositor protection mechanism that currently applies to banks should,
subject to appropriate transitional arrangements, be extended to all regulated
DTIs. Associated resolution arrangements should be transferred to the
APRC and clarified by legislative amendment. Current depositor protection
provisions would provide a greater level of security, in the event of
collapse and liquidation, than an explicit deposit insurance scheme and
are to be preferred on these grounds.
To facilitate depositor protection, restrictions on the classes of debt
and equity that may be issued by DTIs, particularly mutual institutions,
should, as far as possible, be removed (in order to expand non-deposit
sources of funds). In regard to insurance companies and superannuation
funds, the APRC should be empowered to replace management or trustee control
of regulated financial entities in the event of their actual or likely
failure. Existing policy holder preferences applied to statutory funds
of life companies should be retained and extended to benefit funds of
friendly societies.
Chapter Nine: Stability and Payments
In any financial system a limited range of financial claims can be used
as a means of payment to settle transactions. For example, notes and coins,
the deposit liabilities of banks (mobilised by instruments such as cheques)
and credit cards backed by lines of credit, can all be used to settle
transactions, and thus form part of the payments system. There is scope
for increased competition in the payments system which will help to lower
its costs of operation. However, this must be balanced against the need
to maintain stability in the financial system. The payments system provides
one central way in which instability can be generated. The RBA should
retain overall responsibility for the stability of the financial system,
the provision of emergency liquidity assistance and for regulating the
payments system.
Large scale instability (called systemic instability) can arise from
default on settlement of transactions, especially for high value transactions
on bonds, foreign exchange and derivatives products where receipts and
payments may not be synchronised. Initiatives such as the 'real-time-gross-settlement'
(RTGS) system should mitigate domestic sources of settlement risk; here,
each high value transaction is settled as it occurs. Time lags in other
settlements are also being shortened. However, substantial risks remain,
especially for international transactions. The RBA should give high priority
to promoting further cost-effective control of both domestic and international
settlement risks. On the other hand, the CFSC should be responsible for
regulation of financial exchanges in these matters.
Apart from settlement risk, financial system instability may also have
its origins in generalised disruption to financial and other markets.
Confidence in some financial market participants may plummet and this
may generate a broader market crisis. The policy responses to such developments
will vary with their particular circumstances but may include the provisions
of emergency funds (i.e. liquidity) to markets generally or to particular
sectors. These should remain the responsibility of the RBA (in consultation
with the Treasurer), in its role as both monetary authority and manager
of systemic risk.
Increased competition in the payments system is possible without jeopardising
systemic stability. A new institutional framework is necessary to achieve
this. Existing arrangements should be dissolved and a new Payments System
Board (PSB) should be formed within the RBA to regulate payments with
a view to increasing efficiency and competition. It should set performance
benchmarks for these goals and its membership should reflect this. The
RBA's regulatory activities in these areas should be clearly separated
from its commercial activities, such as acting as main banker to governments.
In regard to specific reforms to increase competition and efficiency,
the right to issue cheques in their own name should be extended to all
licensed DTIs. The ACCC and the PSB should monitor the delivery fees charged
on credit and debit cards while the ACCC should monitor the rules of international
credit card associations to ensure they are not overly restrictive. Access
to final clearance for financial transactions should be liberalised, its
efficiency upgraded, and the Trade Practices Act 1974 should continue
to apply to it. Access to ESAs with the RBA should be liberalised, while
non deposit-taking institutions should be able to directly settle consumer
electronic and bulk electronic payments through an ESA.
In regard to increased financial system security, RTGS benchmarks should
be established, the PSB should issue payments system approvals and the
PSB and the APRC should establish close coordination arrangements, while
holders of 'stores of value' for payments instruments such as traveller's
cheques and smart cards should be subject to prudential regulation. High-value
settlement providers should be regulated to international standards.
Chapter Ten: Mergers and Acquisitions
A competitive financial system is in the best interests of Australia
and the laws and administration of policies on mergers and acquisitions
play an important role in achieving this. The Trade Practices Act 1974
provides a set of economy-wide laws on competition. It is recommended
that Section 50 of the Act should continue to apply to the financial system,
so that a merger is prohibited where, in a substantial market, a substantial
lessening of competition would be likely to result. Indeed, the Trade
Practices Act should provide the only competition regulation of financial
system mergers. The ACCC should continue to administer competition laws
for the financial system. However, the APRC (and not the Treasurer) should
be given powers to regulate mergers and acquisitions on prudential grounds.
In particular, the current 'six pillars' policy should be abolished.
Under this policy, mergers are not permitted between the four largest
banks (National Australia, Commonwealth, ANZ and Westpac) and the two
largest life insurance institutions (AMP and National Mutual). There are
no persuasive arguments for continuing to separate out such possible mergers
from the general operation of competition policy and then to impose a
blanket ban upon them.
On the other hand, this Report makes no recommendations about particular
merger scenarios and it is not possible to comment definitively on assessment
criteria in the abstract. However, the methodologies used in recent ACCC
examinations of proposed bank mergers need review. Competition in retail
transaction accounts and small business finance, currently at relatively
low levels, is likely to be crucial in future assessments of merger proposals.
The ongoing formation of national markets in some banking products and
the competitive effects of the presence of regional banks will also be
important considerations. In general, assessments of merger proposals
should always take account of changes occurring in that sector.
In regard to foreign investment, the current policy position prohibiting
the foreign takeover of any of the four major banks should be explicitly
removed and replaced with a policy which provides that all foreign acquisitions
in the financial system will be assessed through the general provisions
of foreign investment policy under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers
Act 1975. While a large scale transfer of ownership of the financial
system to foreign hands would be contrary to the national interest (since
it would restrict options for the future development of the financial
system), some increase in foreign ownership of aspects of the Australian
financial system could generate significant benefits such as injections
of new capital, access to new skills and technologies and enhanced competitive
pressures in domestic financial markets.
Chapter Eleven: Promoting Increased Efficiency
The funds management industry is composed of funds collectively invested
in life insurance, superannuation, equities and unit trusts. It has both
retail and wholesale dimensions. Funds management fees in Australia appear
to be higher than those in comparable countries. One of the potential
reasons for higher costs in Australia is the fragmentation of the managed
funds industry.
Regulatory reform can improve the performance of the managed funds industry.
The following specific reforms are recommended. Foreign investment regulations
restricting foreign owned or controlled managers of collective investments
should be reviewed. The Corporations Law should be amended to provide
for the application of takeover provisions modelled on Chapter 6 of the
Corporations Law for public unit trusts, and to provide for streamlined
merger and reconstruction provisions for collective investment scheme.
The Australian Stock Exchange should amend Listing Rules 15.14 to permit
the exercise of sanctions in trust deeds designed to provide unit holders
with the protection embodied in Chapter 6 of the Corporations Law.
Superannuation fund members should have greater choice of fund. Employees
should be provided with choice of fund, subject to any constraints necessary
to address concerns about administrative costs and fund liquidity. Transfer
costs should be transparent and reasonable. Regulation of collective investments
and public offer superannuation should be harmonised. The States and Territories
should give urgent priority to establishing a modern, uniform, national
regime for trustee companies. There is also considerable scope for rationalising
and standardising the taxation of collective investments, although this
is outside the Report's terms of reference.
A regulatory framework which is responsive to technological innovation
will also promote increased efficiency. Relevant legislation should be
generally amended to allow for, and facilitate, electronic commerce. Regulation
should not differ between different technologies or delivery mechanisms
in such a way as to favour one technology over another. Australia should
also adopt international standards for electronic commerce, and international
harmonisation of law enforcement and consumer protection should be pursued,
especially in regard to electronic commerce. Financial regulators should
keep abreast of technological developments as they affect the financial
system and liaise with each other as well as government departments and
other agencies on these issues.
The existence of cross-subsidies between products, channels and customer
groups is pervasive in the financial system. Profits from higher prices
for some transactions are used to provide prices which are lower than
they would otherwise be for other transactions. Cross-subsidies are derived
from historical product bundling, earlier difficulties with apportioning
costs, and community expectations that institutions should meet community
service obligations. The unwinding of such cross-subsidies can increase
efficiency in the financial system. Institutions should have the freedom
to set fees and charges on their services and products based upon costs,
without government intervention or suasion. Governments should expedite
the examination of alternative means of providing low-cost transaction
services for remote areas and for recipients of social security and other
transfer payments.
In regard to the mortgage insurance market, which is of great importance
to mortgage lenders, the Housing Loans Insurance Corporation should be
privatised to eliminate its undercharging, in comparison to private insurers,
which is derived from the Commonwealth Government's guarantee of its activities.
Improved flows of market information can also increase efficiency. In
regard to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), debt markets are
not seriously deficient, while equity markets are improving. The current
low investment by superannuation fund managers in this sector will probably
increase and there should be no compulsion on funds managers to invest
in SMEs. However, compared to the United States, Australia lacks benchmarking
and performance measurement data on investment pools in the SME sector.
This discourages institutional investment there. The CFSC and the Australian
Bureau of Statistics should take into account the specific requirements
of credit-rating agencies and funds managers when reviewing SME data collection.
In regard to privacy issues, current credit reporting for lender institutions
is restricted to negative reporting of defaults and delinquencies. The
Privacy Act prevents positive credit reporting (i.e. the successful
completion of debt repayments). The latter would be very useful in making
more efficient credit assessments of potential borrowers. This restriction
should be reviewed. In a similar vein, credit information sharing amongst
group entities should be allowed unless the customer withdraws consent.
In general, reforms to the privacy regime should balance protection, choice
and efficiency, be responsive to market changes, be national in scope,
avoid duplication and deal sensibly with information collected under previous
privacy regimes. The administration of privacy laws in the financial system
should be done by the Privacy Commissioner rather than the financial consumer
protection regulator.
Chapter Twelve: Coordination and Accountability
The regulatory agencies should be established under legislation with
substantial operational autonomy. The APRC and the CFSC should establish
their own staffing and remuneration structures in whatever form will be
most conducive to their effectiveness and efficiency. They should locate
their headquarters in the main financial capitals, rather than Canberra.
Inspection staff should be located in the cities where the financial industry
operates. It is only under these conditions that regulation can be as
effective and efficient as possible. Regulatory agencies' charges should
reflect their costs, subject to approval by the Treasurer, so that they
fund themselves. In this context, the current below-market rate of interest
paid by the RBA on its holdings of banks' non-callable deposits is distortionary
and should be reviewed. Regulatory agencies should thus be 'off-budget'
in their treatment by the fiscal authorities.
APRC, CFSC and PSB should all have boards of directors responsible for
their operational and administrative policies, the fulfilment of their
legislative mandates and their performance. The key principles in the
composition of these new boards are that there should be majorities of
independent members and that there be substantial cross-representation.
The chairpersons of the APRC and CFSC boards and the PSB should be appointed
by the Treasurer from among the independent members. Each agency should
report annually to Parliament and should seek continuous improvement in
reporting quality. Reports should include results of internal assessments
of efficiency, compliance costs and cost effectiveness. Where possible,
comparisons with international best-practice should be provided. Legislation
should authorise the exchange of confidential information amongst the
financial regulatory agencies.
A Financial Sector Advisory Council should be created to provide independent
advice on implementation of the new regulatory arrangements, their relevance
and cost effectiveness, the compliance costs imposed upon financial market
participants, the international competitiveness of the financial sector
and new and potential financial developments. The Council of Financial
Supervisors should be renamed as the Council of Financial Regulators and
reconfigured with the aims of facilitating the cooperation of its three
members (RBA, APRC and CFSC) across the full range of regulatory functions.
Further amalgamation of financial regulators is not warranted because
it would be premature, would reduce the benefits of specialisation and
thus undermine efficiency, and would create an agency which might be excessively
powerful.
Chapter Thirteen: Managing Change
A staged approach should be adopted to implementing this Report's recommendations,
commencing with an announcement of the Government's position in principle
on the main recommendations, and followed by establishing the new regulatory
agencies and investing them with existing regulatory powers. It is highly
desirable that the Government announce its position on the mergers and
acquisitions recommendations as soon as possible, in order to quell speculation
and provide commercial certainty.
Negotiations with State and Territory Governments would also need to
proceed on the transfer of regulatory powers which are currently the responsibility
of the state-based AFIC regime. As well, a Panel for Uniform Commercial
Laws should be established to pursue uniform Commonwealth, State and Territory
commercial laws. The Panel should complete its task by no later than the
end of 1999.
Chapter Fourteen: Stocktake, Historical Perspective
Tight control of the banking system in the post-World War Two era encouraged
the growth of non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs). Life companies
were actively engaged in mortgage lending to satisfy demand unmet by banks.
Building societies and credit unions also expanded. Merchant banks developed
to satisfy unmet demand for corporate borrowing. The banks themselves
established subsidiary finance companies to overcome the strict regulation
of their own lending and borrowing activities.
By the late 1970s pressure for regulatory reform was mounting through
a combination of inflation, exogenous shocks and the declining effectiveness
of a monetary policy system which was reliant upon control of banks' balance
sheets, despite the importance of NBFIs in the financial system. It was
in this context that the Campbell Committee was established in 1979; it
issued its report in 1981. Its recommendations were targeted at both improving
the efficiency of macroeconomic management and at the abolition of direct
interest rate and portfolio controls on financial institutions. Although
the Campbell Committee was concerned to remove barriers to entry to the
financial system, its recommendations also included strengthened prudential
measures to preserve system stability.
As of mid-1996 the majority of the Committee's recommendations had been
implemented. Most importantly, interest rate and bank lending controls
were relaxed, barriers to entry in banking were liberalised, controls
on capital flows were abolished, and the exchange rate was floated. These
policy changes are usually called 'financial deregulation'. In the period
since Campbell, many other important policy changes have occurred, such
as the privatisation of financial institutions, the development of compulsory
superannuation and economy-wide microeconomic reform. These changes make
it difficult to assess the effects of financial deregulation.
Chapter Fifteen: Stocktake, The Financial System
The Campbell Committee believed that less intrusive regulation and greater
competition would lead to greater efficiency in the financial system,
and that consumers would benefit from these changes. However, the expected
increase in competition, particularly in the retail deposit taking sector,
has been slow to arise. Only in more recent times have some retail financial
markets (e.g. home mortgages) become obviously more competitive. On the
other hand, efficiency has improved in several areas since deregulation.
Increased pricing efficiency, in securities and foreign exchange markets
in particular, has improved the efficiency of resource allocation. The
productivity of financial market participants has also risen in many cases,
with technological innovation playing a major role in this.
International competitiveness was not a major focus of the Campbell
Committee. The limited data available provide some support for the view
that underlying competitiveness has increased since deregulation in some
areas but deteriorated in others. On the other hand, product choice has
clearly widened since the early 1980s. This is attributable to deregulation
as well as to technological developments, government superannuation initiatives,
and increased integration with international financial markets. The quality
of financial products has also risen. However, one exception to the improvement
of financial products and services is the provision of information and
advice, which still appears to be in need of further development. Overall,
although deregulation has yielded benefits in the above areas, there is
room for further improvement.
Chapter Sixteen: Stocktake, Financial Regulation
In response to both the financial problems which occurred in the late
1980s (such as increased loan default rates and heightened financial institution
distress) and the expansion of superannuation, prudential regulation was
upgraded through tougher capital requirements and structurally reformed
through consolidation, refocusing and better coordination of regulatory
agencies. The greater range and complexity of financial products and,
in some areas, concerns about more aggressive selling practices, have
also led to an increased focus upon consumer protection. This has resulted
in new consumer credit regulation and new rules for disclosure, codes
of conduct and dispute resolution.
Globalisation has created an increasing need for global harmonisation
of, and cooperation in, the conduct of financial regulation. In the face
of new technologies, alliances and market structures, increased regulatory
attention has been given to ensuring competitive conduct in all segments
of the market and to providing a competitively neutral policy environment.
However, the ad hoc nature of some new regulation has created a quite
expensive regulatory framework. Over 800 staff are now involved in financial
regulation in Australia, resulting in direct and compliance costs which
appear to be high by international standards.
Chapter Seventeen: Stocktake, The Economy
While the difficulty of determining the effects of financial deregulation
on the economy has been noted, some observations can still be made. The
removal of exchange controls accelerated the integration of Australia
with world capital markets. This expanded the opportunities for both Australian-owned
capital and foreign-owned capital in Australia. In both cases this is
likely to have been beneficial to Australia.
Indeed, measures on productivity in the Australian economy suggest an
upturn in the 1990s, which has bolstered economic growth. This may be
attributable in part to greater efficiency resulting from financial deregulation.
However, the adjustment to a deregulated financial system was difficult,
with a credit boom and asset-price inflation generating a subsequent correction
in the early 1990s and associated bad debts and bankruptcies.
Exchange rate flexibility has increased Australian flexibility in responding
to economic shocks, while financial deregulation has restored the power
of monetary policy and allowed it to focus upon inflation control.
Increased scrutiny of government's economic policies by financial markets
may be viewed either as an undesirable constraint or as a desirable source
of discipline upon governments.
The weakness in national savings in the period since deregulation does
not appear to be strongly associated with deregulation, since it is due
mainly to low public sector savings, especially as a result of Commonwealth
Government budget deficits. Similarly, the impact of deregulation on long-term
employment seems small and is likely to be dominated by its impact on
economic growth. It cannot be blamed for enduring high levels of unemployment.
In this section we gather together some noteworthy arguments which can
be, and have been, made against some of the policy recommendations made
in the Wallis Report. This provides the counterbalance to the earlier
sections which summarised the Report's arguments and recommendations.
These opposing arguments are a 'smorgasbord of dissent' which are drawn
from a variety of perspectives. Some of the arguments and perspectives
are in conflict with each other, so that, as a whole, the following do
not form a consistent, integrated set of alternative policies.
Consumer Protection
The main policy position opposing the construction of the CFSC would
seem to be one advocating that consumer protection should be administered
on an economy-wide basis by the ACCC while regulation of corporations
and financial market integrity is done by another agency. We now present
the main arguments in support of this view.
The central advantage of an economy-wide regulator in any policy field
is that it can ensure standardisation of regulation across industry sectors
and thus achieve competitive neutrality. Here, the burden of regulation
is born equally by all industries affected, so that regulation does not
create economic distortions by favouring some sectors over others, and
thus changing the allocation of resources across industries. With more
than one regulator in the field, there is a consequent danger that regulation
will not be standardised, and differences in regulation will thus distort
economic and commercial choices.
It could be argued that this danger is particularly relevant in the
case where a regulator for one sector of the economy is to be constructed,
for here the narrow focus of the specialised regulator's work, the corresponding
focused industry opposition to it, and its limited ability to generate
political support in other areas of the political economy, make it vulnerable
to 'capture' by the industry. Here, the standards of regulation will often
be less rigorous and demanding than for the rest of the economy, because
the industry will ensure that regulatory policy is 'industry friendly'.(6)
It could be argued that this scenario is very much applicable to the
case of the construction of the CFSC since it is envisaged that financial
consumer protection will be taken away from the ACCC, the formerly economy-wide
regulator, and given to a body which will not concern itself with consumer
protection in other industry sectors. This danger could be reinforced
if the CFSC is dominated by staff from the ASC who might thus have little
interest in consumer protection and concentrate on their other responsibilities,
while allowing financial consumer protection to be overly influenced by
the wishes of financial sector firms.(7)
The ACCC's well-known rigorous standards for consumer protection could
thus be watered down by the CFSC in relation to the financial system.
Besides creating inefficiencies, this outcome could also be interpreted
as unfair by those who regard rigorous consumer protection as a high social
and political priority.
It could be argued that lodging the administration of all financial
consumer protection with the ACCC avoids these problems. A CFSC might
still be formed but its responsibilities would now resemble those of the
currently existing ASC. As such, the argument for any institutional reform
in this area would become much more tenuous.
The Mega Prudential Regulator
While there do not seem to be any substantial arguments against the
formation of one regulator for all DTIs, there are a couple of noteworthy
arguments against the formation of a single prudential regulator for the
entire financial system.
First, it is clear that the nature of prudential regulation is different
for products where a commercial promise of a capital guarantee of funds
has been made (e.g. bank deposits) compared to products where no such
promise has been made and funds are deployed and used on a 'best-endeavours'
basis, often by a trustee structure (e.g. superannuation fund contributions).
In the latter case, there is no institutional promise that investment
mistakes and market fluctuations will not be sufficiently large as to
wipe out some portion of the capital value of the investments.
Prudential regulation is, and will continue to be, very different in
these two cases, and their conjoining in the one regulatory body will
necessitate different divisions within the regulator to cope with the
very different demands of regulation in the two classes of investments
and institutions. This might undermine the advantages of policy specialisation
which arise from giving public instrumentalities a few clear goals which
they should pursue.(8) The greater the complexity of the regulatory goals
and practices set for any organisation the greater the danger that it
will not fulfil any of them terribly well but will do only a minimally
satisfactory job of each.
This might mean, for example, that the high standards of prudential
bank supervision achieved by the RBA could be compromised through the
formation of the APRC.
Second, it could be argued that the formation of the mega prudential
regulator, the APRC, will generate excessive expectations about the safety
of investments with non-deposit taking institutions especially. This might
lead to problems of 'moral hazard' in which such investors and institutions
engage in excessively risky behaviour on the assumption that there is
a government guarantee of any investments made.(9) This could create the
very sort of financial collapse that prudential regulation is designed
to avoid.
Large segments of the general public clearly believe that bank deposits
are currently guaranteed by the government through the RBA. Official spokespersons
may deny such a guarantee exists but it seems clear from mass financial
behaviour and public opinion poll responses that this belief exists. The
creation of a mega regulator might thus lead many individuals to believe
that this guarantee has been extended to all investments and institutions
supervised by the APRC. Such a belief might be quite immune to denials
by official sources.
Indeed, the mere existence of such a belief could generate such powerful
mass political sentiments, at times of financial institution distress
or collapse, that governments are forced to step in and ensure that the
retail investments in question are fully refunded. This could place enormous
pressure on the Commonwealth Budget. Thus, it could be argued that the
formation of an APRC will vastly increase these implicit and contingent
liabilities for the Commonwealth Government, and thus, this regulatory
change should be avoided.
One way to avoid such problems for the APRC might be to delete any explicit
reference to deposit protection, by any government agency, in its defining
legislation and to have this deletion well publicised by the Commonwealth
and APRC officers. Alternatively, such problems could also be avoided
under an APRC regime by ensuring that DTIs are clearly distinguished from
non-DTIs, through the use of explicit, and compulsory, deposit-insurance
schemes in the former. Such schemes are discussed later in this paper.
Separating Prudential Regulation from the RBA
There are a couple of noteworthy arguments against the view that prudential
regulation should be separated from the central bank.
First, it should be remembered that the Wallis Report proposes that
provision of emergency liquidity assistance to financial institutions
in distress should remain with the RBA and not be given as responsibility
to the APRC. It could be argued that this arrangement creates the danger
that RBA decision-making responses may be too slow in times of financial
emergency, precisely because it has not been dealing with the supervision
of institutions on a continuing day-to-day basis and is thus not sufficiently
familiar with the cases of financial distress which have arisen.
Placing RBA officers on the board of APRC reduces this danger somewhat,
as would the formation of a bilateral operational coordination committee,
but only to the extent that such RBA officers take their work with the
APRC seriously and have sufficient influence within the RBA during times
of emergency that decision-making is rapid enough to meet the needs of
the institution in trouble. If not, then slowness of provision of emergency
funds might allow a basically sound institution, in only temporary difficulties
(e.g. in a 'solvent but illiquid' situation), to collapse needlessly.(10)
This problem might be avoided by vesting control over emergency liquidity
with the prudential regulator, so that rapid response can match the need
of the institution for rapid emergency help. However, this raises questions
of where such funds are to be raised and what volumes of funds will be
necessary to cope with 'typical' problems of financial distress. One solution
would be to give the APRC power to quickly draw such emergency support
funds from the RBA when the former thought it necessary; here, the requests
would be 'compulsory' in nature (i.e. much more like instructions) and
the RBA would not have the power to delay, resist or refuse them.
Second, the separation of RBA responsibilities for monetary policy from
prudential regulation gives up completely on the possibility of the coordinated
deployment of monetary policy instruments (short-term nominal interest
rates) and prudential policy instruments (capital requirements, liquidity
requirements, etc.) to jointly achieve monetary policy goals and prudential
soundness. That is, monetary policy may sometimes be useful in achieving
prudential goals (e.g. in enhancing institutional soundness) while prudential
policy may sometimes be useful in achieving macroeconomic goals such as
inflation control (e.g. by affecting borrowing and lending flows).(11)
There may be many occasions where such joint usage of instruments in
a coordinated fashion will more effectively and efficiently achieve all
these goals than the narrow specialised targeting of one set of instruments
on one goal, as would occur under separation and as occurs now. Current
RBA philosophy and policy practice does not advocate such joint deployment
of policy instruments but this does not mean that such usage will not
be possible in the future. Such policy coordination would be very difficult
to achieve when policy is decided by two separate bodies.
Fees and Charges
The Report's recommendation that financial institutions be free to set
fees and charges at efficient, profitable levels could be challenged on
the basis of the following arguments.
Particularly in regard to transaction accounts, it could be argued that
financial institutions have a community service obligation of offering
at least the rudiments of low cost services, often called a Basic Banking
Product (BBP). These products are especially important to low-income,
low-wealth customers of financial institutions.(12) Such a BBP would allow
the avoidance of fees below some threshold of usage, provide regular account
information, and also offer some convenient and extensive bill-paying
facility.
The nature of a BBP is such that its features necessarily imply that
the financial institution is not pricing such a product according to efficiency
principles of the marginal costs of operation. For example, efficient
pricing would not allow any fee-free threshold of usage because each account
transaction entails some cost to the institution which should, according
to efficient and profit-seeking pricing, have a fee attached to it.
Transaction accounts quite closely approximating the concept of a BBP
are now offered by the banks. These were introduced in the aftermath of
the issue of the report by the former Prices Surveillance Authority in
1995 on the subject.(13) They offer, for example, a fee-free range of
usage, in exchange for generally not having to pay interest on account
balances.(14) It now remains to be seen whether they continue to be offered
or are withdrawn in response to the coming policy changes which the Wallis
Report will generate.
It is generally agreed that other policy approaches to providing a BBP,
especially for low-income and low-wealth customers, can be more economically
efficient than the operation of the budget accounts described above. One
obvious option is to use the tax/ transfer system to subsidise the account
usage of such disadvantaged customers. Here, account pricing could be
efficiently set but this would not reduce the real incomes of such customers,
who will be recompensed for such costs. The Wallis Report advocates the
further study of such compensation schemes.
However, the current reality of fiscal politics at the Commonwealth
level is that ongoing moves to budgetary tightening over the next few
years will almost certainly preclude the introduction of such schemes.
Even in the medium to long term, the likelihood of such an introduction
may be slight, given the many other claims which will be made upon the
Commonwealth's revenue and spending systems.
In this situation, it could be argued that the Commonwealth should ensure
that such basic transaction accounts continue to be offered by legislating
to force all deposit taking institutions to offer them.(15) The inefficiencies
entailed in such compulsion would probably be small so long as institutions
continued to offer a range of other accounts which had economically efficient
pricing policies attached to them.
Access Points to Financial Institutions
Similar arguments can also be made in regard to the convenience of access
to financial services. The Report argues that substantial cost savings
are possible if financial institutions rationalise their distribution
systems so that high cost channels of distribution, such as bank branches,
undergo some contraction while low cost channels, such as ATMs, undergo
expansion. These changes will come about, both through direct management
decisions by the institutions and as an automatic result of more efficient
and cost relevant pricing of distribution channels. Branch transactions
should be more expensive, in relative terms, while electronic transactions
should become cheaper in relative terms.
The contrary argument would be that financial institutions have a community
service obligation to provide a reasonable spread of their distribution
channels, both in terms of geographic distribution and in terms of offering
a range of types of transactions. This would mean that the configuration
of distribution points should not just be determined by efficiency and
cost considerations but also by the needs of the community. Thus, it could
be argued that governments should liaise with financial institutions and
apply relevant incentives and pressures to them to ensure a sufficiently
wide and varied distribution system for financial services.
In particular, this argument probably implies that the branch systems
of financial institutions should not be allowed to fall below some minimum
breadth of coverage and that the fees attached to branch transactions
should not be allowed to rise above some threshold. Alternatively, the
provision of basic transaction accounts discussed earlier could be designed
so that some branch transactions were always included as a part of the
fee-free range of usage.
In regard to branches, this argument could imply allowing, or encouraging,
explicit cooperation amongst financial institutions so that towns and
suburbs were left with at least one or two of their branches for the use
of customers, even if the full range of institutions was no longer present
in each of them.(16) This would allow cost savings for the financial system
as a whole while preserving a minimum level of financial services.
The Six Pillars Policy
The Wallis Report recommended that the prohibition on mergers between
the largest banks and life offices be abandoned so that the ACCC will
be the sole competition policy regulator in these matters. The Commonwealth
Government has already announced that while it now does not, in principle,
oppose mergers between any life office and any bank, it will still maintain
the ban on mergers between the four largest banks until such time as competition
in key areas such as finance for SMEs, and transactions accounts, has
intensified substantially.(17)
Many sections of the community support the Government's move since they
hold substantial grounds for disquiet over further bank mergers at a time
when newly released competitive forces are just finding a foothold in
a quite concentrated financial system. While it appears somewhat unlikely
that the ACCC would have approved such proposed mergers if allowed to,
it can be argued that the issue is of such national importance that it
warrants the Government's continued pre-emptive overriding of any ACCC
views on these matters.
The operational autonomy of regulatory bodies is of considerable importance
for good public policymaking, but on matters of high national interest
it could be argued to be perfectly valid and proper for the elected government
of the day to take matters into their own hands and make binding decisions,
for which they will be answerable to the general public at the next election.
This principle could also be applied to matters of high importance in
regulatory matters conducted by other financial system bodies, such as
the prudential regulator or the consumer protection agency.
Foreign Ownership
The Report's somewhat half-hearted support for, and ambivalent attitude
towards, higher direct foreign investment in the Australian financial
system, could be challenged from perspectives both of being too hostile
to foreign investment, and then of being too trusting and naive in its
attitude to foreign investment. The Report's position on this issue has
been largely adopted by the Commonwealth Government.(18)
As the Report notes, direct foreign investment in the financial system
can bring with it the substantial benefits of new capital, skills, technologies
and intensified competition. It might also lay the foundation for the
outward expansion of Australian financial institutions into new markets.
This, in turn, could generate benefits for their Australian operations
in terms of economies of scale and world-best-practice operational efficiency.
However, the Report's warning that a substantial increase in foreign
ownership would be against the national interest, because it might close
off options for future development of the financial sector, could be viewed
as fundamentally inconsistent with the great bulk of the arguments and
recommendations it makes. The Report is very much in the mould of advocating
greater freedom for market forces to improve efficiency and productivity
in the financial system. However, in relation to foreign investment it
proposes the continuation of restrictions which have the effect of shielding
the sector, in large part, from the full force of international investor
competition.
If, for example, all DTIs in Australia were open to takeover by overseas
financial institutions then they would face intensified pressure for continued
good performance in order to be able to ward off such potential threats
to their independence.(19) This attitude of the Report on the dangers
of foreign investment could thus be viewed as somewhat paradoxical. Indeed,
this very principle which supports investment restrictions might be applied
to many other sectors of the economy and become the justification for
imposing substantial restrictions on direct foreign investment there.
But clearly, it is not at all the intention of the Wallis Committee that
its argument should be used in this way.
It is also interesting to note that the Report is silent on specific
foreign investment issues such as whether foreign bank branches should
be allowed to enter retail markets directly by accepting small retail
deposits in their Australian operations. The foreign banks which initially
flowed into Australia in the 1980s were required to set up locally incorporated
subsidiaries in order to facilitate full prudential supervision by the
RBA. The previous Commonwealth Government allowed foreign banks to set
up branches (i.e. directly controlled divisions of their foreign parent
bank) operating in wholesale markets but not in retail markets. One concern
about foreign bank branches operating in retail markets has been that
in the case of their collapse and liquidation there might be substantial
doubt about Australian depositors having any sort of preference over other
creditors in the final distribution of remaining assets after liquidation.(20)
Overall, it might be viewed as indicative of the Report's rather strange
treatment of foreign investment that it failed to address this important
current policy issue.
Of course, the Report can also be criticised from the opposite perspective
that foreign ownership of key national assets such as its largest banks
and insurance companies should not be allowed at all, for the Report's
very own reason that it would close off options for future development
of these industries in ways which might be against the long-term national
interest of Australia. From this perspective, at the very least, foreign
investors in these sectors should be subject to rigorous performance criteria
to ensure that Australia gets a good share of the benefits which their
presence might generate.(21)
Deposit Insurance
Finally, the Report's abandonment of the idea of explicit deposit insurance
for retail customers could be challenged. Such schemes are quite widely
used throughout the world, in both advanced and developing countries.(22)
As the Committee notes, the great advantage of such explicit, compulsory
insurance schemes is that they give retail customers certainty that their
deposits with financial institutions are completely safe. This would remove
any lingering doubts about the current system which the Report describes
as ensuring that the chances of losing depositors' funds is remote, rather
than being zero. This certainty promotes policy transparency and provides
a good environment in which efficient customer choices can be made about
the allocation of their wealth amongst assets of differing risk and return
characteristics. It also provides a social equity value of safety for
customers, especially low-income ones, seeking full security and unable
to judge the varying security of the financial institutions on offer in
terms of retail accounts. Thus, it furthers both efficiency and equity
as financial outcomes.
After consideration of overseas schemes and the role of deposit insurance
in the savings and loan fiasco in the United States, the Committee concluded
that, for Australian financial circumstances, it was unable to devise
insurance schemes which would not undermine incentives for institutions
to take proper care of their depositors' funds. Thus, it dropped the idea.
However, it is well known that there are ways of designing such insurance
schemes which encourage prudent use of deposit funds by institutions.(23)
These are schemes where the insurance premiums to be paid by institutions
(either to public or private insurers) vary with the risk profile of the
assets of the institution, with more risky lending to business, for example,
attracting higher premiums than for other types of lending. Such insurance
schemes have some likeness to the risk-weighted capital adequacy rules
now widely applied by bank regulators throughout the advanced world, where
more risky lending requires greater capital backing in order to better
protect deposit funds from the greater dangers of default in these cases.
There have also been doubts expressed, in the Report and elsewhere,
about whether governments will have the political will and commercial
and actuarial sense to price the insurance premiums at levels that will
fully cover any likely payouts from institutional collapse. There are
two options to address this issue. First, for insurance schemes operated
by governments, they could call upon private insurance expertise in designing
and operating these schemes so that they are financially and actuarially
sound. Second, governments could completely 'contract out' such insurance
schemes by simply requiring all deposit taking institutions to take out
private insurance to cover the refund of deposits in the event that the
institution collapses and is put into liquidation.
Such insurance could be capped at some account balance level, for social
equity reasons of ensuring that insurance payouts do not disproportionately
benefit the wealthy. Other prudential regulatory measures aimed at deposit
protection could be simplified and relaxed, in order to help institutions
pay for such insurance premiums. Thus, it could be viewed as disappointing
that the Wallis Committee did not investigate these insurance options
in much more depth.
It is interesting to note that deposit insurance could provide a neat
solution to the safety problems surrounding foreign bank branches in Australia.
Such branches could be allowed to accept retail deposits provided they
were insured. This would facilitate the benefits of the extra competition
that branches would bring while at the same time guaranteeing full security,
up to the capped level, for such retail deposits.
Conduct and Disclosure
1 Corporations Law, market integrity and consumer protection should
be combined in a single agency, the Corporations and Financial Services
Commission (CFSC).
2 The CFSC should have comprehensive responsibilities.
3 The CFSC should administer all consumer protection laws for financial
services.
4 Due diligence defences should apply to positive disclosure requirements.
5 The CFSC and the ACCC should coordinate examination of financial exchange
rules.
6 States and Territories should retain and review consumer credit laws.
7 The CFSC should have powers to use a combination of regulatory approaches.
8 Disclosure requirements should be consistent and comparable.
9 Profile statements should be introduced for more effective disclosure.
10 Shorter prospectuses should be encouraged.
11 Financial institutions' financial reports should meet Corporations
Law and prudential requirements.
12 Accounting standards should be harmonised with international standards.
13 A single licensing regime should be introduced for financial sales,
advice and dealing.
14 The CFSC should have power to delegate accreditation responsibilities
to industry bodies.
15 A single set of requirements should be introduced for financial sales
and advice.
16 Regulation of real estate agents providing financial advice should
be reviewed.
16 Licensing of professionals providing incidental financial advice
is generally not required.
18 Additional prudential regulation of financial market licence holders
is not required.
19 Broader regulation of 'financial products' should replace current
securities and futures law.
20 Prohibitions on retail participation in over-the-counter (OTC) derivative
markets should be discontinued.
21 The CFSC should authorise financial exchanges under a single regime.
22 Regulation of exchanges should not be excessive compared with OTC
markets.
23 OTC markets may be conducted by appropriately licensed intermediaries.
24 Exchange clearing houses should be appropriately authorised.
25 A central gateway for dispute resolution should be established.
26 Coverage of dispute resolution schemes should be broader.
27 The CFSC should have broad enforcement powers.
28 The CFSC should monitor new technologies.
29 The CFSC should participate in global regulatory programs.
Financial Safety
30 Prudential regulation should be imposed on deposit taking, insurance
and superannuation.
31 A single Commonwealth prudential regulator, the Australian Prudential
Regulation Commission (APRC), should be established.
32 The APRC should be separate from, but cooperate closely with, the
Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA).
33 The APRC should have comprehensive powers to meet its regulatory
objectives.
34 The intensity of prudential regulation needs to balance financial
safety and efficiency.
35 Prudential regulation of DTIs needs to be consistent with international
requirements.
36 A single DTI licensing regime should be introduced.
37 Deposit taking by unlicensed entities should be restricted and regulated
by the CFSC.
38 The APRC should regulate life companies.
39 Regulation of friendly societies should be transferred to the Commonwealth.
40 The APRC should regulate general insurers.
41 The APRC should regulate superannuation in accordance with retirement
objectives.
41 Compliance by excluded funds should be monitored by the Australian
Taxation Office.
43 Other APRC regulated institutions should have the right to offer
retirement savings accounts.
44 The APRC should promote more transparent disclosure.
45 The principle of spread of ownership should be retained and regulation
rationalised.
46 The approach to sectoral separation needs to be more flexible.
47 Mutual entities should be permitted to hold all classes of licences.
48 New entrants should be subject to minimum capital and other requirements.
49 Non-operating holding companies should be permitted subject to certain
requirements.
50 Multiple licences and other financial activities may be permitted.
51 The APRC should be empowered to access operations of other non-regulated
entities in the group.
52 Fundraising by money market corporations should be subject to CFSC
surveillance.
53 Fundraising by finance companies should be subject to CFSC surveillance.
54 There should be appropriate mechanisms for resolving failure of DTIs.
55 There should be appropriate mechanisms for resolving failure of insurance
and superannuation.
Stability and Payments
56 The RBA should remain responsible for system stability.
57 The CFSC should be responsible for regulation of financial exchanges.
58 Regulatory agencies should monitor wholesale markets.
59 The RBA should promote control of domestic and international settlement
risks.
60 Liquidity management responses should remain the responsibility of
the RBA.
61 A Payments System Board should be formed within the RBA.
62 Membership of the PSB should reflect payments system efficiency objectives.
63 The PSB should set performance benchmarks.
64 The RBA's commercial activities should be clearly separated from
regulatory responsibilities.
65 The Australian Payments System Council should be disbanded.
66 Rights to issues cheques should be extended.
67 Interchange arrangements should be reviewed by the PSB and the ACCC.
68 The ACCC should maintain a watching brief over the rules of international
credit card associations.
69 Access to clearing systems should be liberalised.
70 The Australian Payments Clearing Association should continue its
role in clearing arrangements with wider membership.
71 The Trade Practices Act should continue to apply to payments clearing
arrangements.
72 Stores of value for payment instruments should be subject to regulation.
73 Access to ESAs should be liberalised subject to appropriate conditions.
74 Highvalue payments settlement providers should be regulated to the
international standard for banks.
75 Non-deposit takers should be able to settle directly consumer electronic
and bulk electronic payments.
76 RTGS system benchmarks should be established.
77 The PSB should issue payments system approvals.
78 The PSB and the APRC should establish close coordination arrangements.
Mergers and Acquisitions
79 Section 50 of the Trade Practices Act should continue to apply to
the financial system.
80 The ACCC should administer competition laws for the financial system.
81 The prudential regulator should assess the prudential implications
of relevant mergers and acquisitions.
82 The Trade Practices Act should provide the only competition regulation
of financial system mergers.
83 The 'six pillars' policy should be removed.
84 Merger assessments should take account of changes occurring in the
sector.
85 General foreign investment policy should apply to the financial system.
Promoting Increased Efficiency
86 Foreign investment regulations for the funds management industry
should be reviewed.
87 Takeover and merger provisions are needed for collective investments.
88 Superannuation fund members should have greater choice of fund.
89 Regulation of collective investments and public offer superannuation
should be harmonised.
90 Regulation of trustee companies should be modernised and applied
on a uniform national basis.
91 Legislation should be amended to allow for electronic commerce.
92 Australia should adopt international standards for electronic commerce.
93 International harmonisation of law enforcement and consumer protection
should be pursued.
94 Regulators should coordinate on technology.
95 Institutions should have freedom to set fees and charges based on
costs.
96 Governments should examine alternative means of providing lowcost
transaction services.
97 Superannuation funds should not be required to invest in small and
medium sized enterprises.
98 Data collection on SMEs should consider the needs of rating agencies
and fund managers.
99 A working party on positive credit reporting should be established.
100 Information sharing among group entities should be allowed unless
the customer withdraws consent.
101 The extension of the privacy regime should follow a number of principles.
102 The Housing Loans Insurance Corporation should be privatised.
Coordination and Accountability
103 Regulatory agencies should have operational autonomy.
104 Regulatory agencies' charges should reflect their costs.
105 Interest on noncallable deposits should be reviewed.
106 Regulatory agencies should set their charges, subject to approval
by the Treasurer.
107 Regulatory agencies should be offbudget.
108 Regulatory agencies should have boards, with majorities of independent
directors.
109 Regulatory agencies should improve their reporting.
110 A Financial Sector Advisory Council should be created.
111 Regulatory agencies need power to exchange information.
112 The Council of Financial Regulators should coordinate a broad range
of activities.
Managing Change
113 A staged approach to change is required.
114 A panel for uniform commercial laws should be established.
115 There is a proposed sequence for implementing the recommendations.
- Australian Financial System Inquiry, Final Report (Campbell
Report), Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service, 1981.
- Australian Financial System Review Group, Report (Martin Review
Report), Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service, 1984.
- Australia, Parliament of Australia, A Pocket Full of Change: Banking
and Deregulation, Report of the House of Representatives Standing
Committee on Finance and Public Administration (Martin Report), Canberra:
Australian Government Publishing Service, November 1991.
- Industry Commission, Availability of Capital, Report No. 18.
Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service, December, 1991.
- Australian Financial System Inquiry, Final Report (Wallis Report),
Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service, March 1997.
- Paul Kelly, 'The Wallis Revolution', Australian, 12-13 April
1997; Tom Burton, 'Wallis: Now for the Hard Yards', Australian Financial
Review, 11 April 1997.
- Andrew Cornell, 'Consumer Groups Rally to ACCC', Australian Financial
Review, 11 April 1997; Bryan Frith, 'B
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