Future of Financial Advice

 

In the context of financial regulation, it is essential to reconcile two conflicting objectives: the need to allow innovation to flourish and the need to protect investors. The policy challenge is to build corporate governance and financial regulation in ways that emphasise duties and responsibilities as well as corporate rights. The appropriate first order question, therefore, is not how we regulate but for what specific purpose? This cannot be undertaken without an extensive examination of the role played by the professions in framing the paramters or acceptable personal and corporate conduct. A necessary first step is to ascertain the strength of underpinning norms of business and professional ethics. There is also the need to re-evaluate specific detection and deterrence mechanisms. This series subjects existing or redesigned professional restraining mechanisms to ongoing and rigorous evaluation.

 

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Corporations Amendment (Future of Financial Advice) Bill 2011 and Corporations Amendment (Further Future of Financial Advice Measures) Bill 2011

The two Bills currently before the committee represent the government's response to the committee's 2009 inquiry into financial products and services in Australia.
Originally Published: 
Wednesday, February 29, 2012

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