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ASIC red tape strangling advisers: Labor

Labor’s financial services spokesman has blamed the regulator’s unwieldy interpretations of financial services law for the advice affordability problem currently faced by middle-class Australians, saying ASIC’s regulatory guidance is “not delivering the outcome the Parliament intended”.

by Sarah Kendell
March 3, 2021
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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When asked at AIA’s Adviser Summit what the regulator should look to address as a priority in its affordable advice consultation, shadow financial services minister Stephen Jones said ASIC should “start by looking at some of their own guidance”.

“I’ve sat with advisers and they’ve shown me the volumes of forms they’ve got to provide just to deliver some basic advice to a client, and I have sympathy for the proposition they’ve put [forward],” Mr Jones said.

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“A well-meaning set of legislative requirements can end up, when the regulator gets its hands on it and turns it into guidance, [creating] a burden that is not delivering the outcome the Parliament intended.”

Mr Jones said he was an advocate for simplifying advice regulation and ensuring “the arrangements [are] commensurate with the complexity of advice”.

“The burden should be proportionate to the risk involved,” he said.

“If something is basic advice, we need to be able to find a way for a person to be able to access it. The burden should not be so overwhelming that a third of the cost of providing that advice is the regulatory cost of providing that advice.

“A lot of [what] advisers will raise with me is the stuff they are doing is red tape that provides no protection for the consumer. We’ve got to look at what we are doing at the moment — the difference between what is a guard rail or basically just red tape that adds no benefit.”

Mr Jones said there was an important role for advisers to play in helping to manage the money of the growing cohort of wealthy retirees in particular, and that neither robo nor intra-fund advice could sufficiently service the rising demand for professional advisory services.

“There’s a lot of talk about the role that automation and robo-advice is going to provide in this space. I’ve never seen a business being able to do it in a way to make a business model out of that — maybe that will come, but it’s not here yet,” he said.

“It would also be naive of us to think the problems exposed by Hayne and others in vertically integrated organisations couldn’t also exist in a not-for-profit fund. So, while [super funds] have a contribution to make, I don’t want us to set up something in the not-for-profit part of wealth management that duplicates all the problems that were exposed two years ago.”

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Comments 1

  1. Robin Friend says:
    5 years ago

    The regulatory framework is a joke. It serves to increase the cost of advice & impacts only those who work within the law.

    In the past 7 years one has to ask how, with so many resources how did ASIC miss Melissa Caddick operations.How did the auditor of the SMSFs involved miss the blatant fraud.

    Everytime a major fraud occurs the regulator is silent.

    Reply

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