Royal Commission call into Australian Banks has Financial Sector in a Panic

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In the wake of Ireland charging an ex Irish Anglo Bank boss over his part played in the GFC, and the elite’s PR mess with Mossack Fornseca and Panama papers, the Australian Big Four Banks are now in a panic.

A call for a Royal Commission by the Labor party has been met with criticism and attack by the Australian Bankers’ Association. “We don’t understand what this royal commission is meant to achieve,” ABA chief executive Steven Munchenberg said.

“Banks are particularly concerned that a call for a royal commission will send alarm signals to international investors about Australia at a time of global volatility.”

However, the pledge by the Labor party if elected in the coming election, will provide a more comprehensive review over the continual failings of the banking system over recent years.

Munchenberg acknowledges the Australian Banking system has failed customers in the past, and that there were incidents left unanswered, but that a royal commission into the financial industry will damage its reputation amongst international investors.

His argument is that “Australian banks are already highly regulated,” and that the “banks support the core of the economy and highly value their social license to operate.”

Labor leader Bill Shorten defends the party decision, saying that public confidence has taken “hit after hit” with scandals in the banking and financial industry. Increasingly, he adds, that tens of thousands of Australians have been left out of pocket.

In the move for a Royal Commission, Shorten has won support from the Industry Super Australia (ISA); worried that the banks could “infect” the consumers’ confidence in compulsory superannuation savings.

“Over recent weeks, months and years Australia’s major banks have faced repeated allegations and evidence of wrongdoing that has reduced public confidence in banking and finance,” ISA have said.

The Royal Commission, if it goes ahead, will span over several years of investigation and a possible cost of $53 million dollars, before it will be able to deliver its findings.


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1 COMMENT

  1. Current PM, Malcolm Turnbull, has rejected calls for a Royal Commission into banking, instead promising to further fund ASIC (Australian Securities and Investments Commission) the banking watchdog; a move banking whistleblower, Feff Morris, sees as ‘Investing in a proven failure’.

    One of the problems of having an exbanker as a PM is that they’re a bit reluctant to go after their mates; blokes (usually blokes) who have helped them in their previous life as a banker, and may actually offer them a job once their political career is kaput.

    Turnbull’s banking history includes: establishing an investment banking firm, Whitlam Turnbull & Co Ltd, in partnership with Neville Wran (a former Labor Premier of New South Wales) and the former State Bank of New South Wales chief executive, Nicholas Whitlam (son of Gough Whitlam, a former Labor prime minister). Whitlam parted company with the others in 1990 and the firm operated as Turnbull & Partners Ltd from then until 1997, when Turnbull moved to become a managing director and later a partner of Goldman Sachs (1997-2001).

    Sources:
    ASIC boost: Big companies to pay $330m a year to fund regulator, SMH, 20/04/2016: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/asic-boost-big-companies-to-pay-more-than-330m-a-year-to-fund-regulator-20160420-gob2dv.html
    ‘Investing in a proven failure’: whistleblower Jeff Morris sceptical of ASIC changes, ABC-World Today, 20/04/2016; http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2016/s4446760.htm
    Wikipedia: Malcolm Turnbull; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm_Turnbull

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