Did Labor benefit from industry super commissions?

15 July 2014
| By Nicholas |
image
image
expand image

NSW Senator John Williams is hoping to find out if Labor benefited from its failure to regulate commissions from industry super funds.  

Responding to criticism of the Government’s decision to implement some of its Future of Financial Advice (FOFA) reforms by regulation by Labor Senator, Lisa Singh, who claimed the changes would open the door for conflicted remuneration, The Nationals Senator said questioned why the previous government had not included commissions on industry super funds’ insurance products in its legislation. 

“I want to make this point,” Senator Williams said. “Conflicted remuneration and commissions are banned for professional advice and for general advice. That is a fact. There is no removal of that.” 

Senator Williams claimed Labor “unnecessarily pushed up the cost of advice for investors” through its FOFA legislation, but failed to regulate certain commissions relating to industry funds. 

“I wonder why, when you brought in your FoFA regulations, you did not have regulations on commissions from some of those insurance products.  

“I look forward to finding out where some of those commissions and rebates on insurance products actually go. Many people say they go to the Labor Party. I look forward to doing some investigation on that.”  

Under the Abbott Government’s reforms, Senator Williams said the interests of clients would remain “first and foremost”, stressing there would be no commissions for general advice or personal advice. 

“There are no commissions or conflicted remunerations, whether it be on general, professional or personal advice,” he said. 

“I would just reaffirm that the best interest test stays locked in concrete.  

“The Government are simply trying to remove some of the red tape and costs so that the compliance and administration costs of financial planners do not grow and grow and grow where they get to the stage where they have to charge so much whereby people will simply not seek professional advice.” 

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Recommended for you

sidebar subscription

Never miss the latest developments in Super Review! Anytime, Anywhere!

Grant Banner

From my perspective, 40- 50% of people are likely going to be deeply unhappy about how long they actually live. ...

4 months ago
Kevin Gorman

Super director remuneration ...

4 months 1 week ago
Anthony Asher

No doubt true, but most of it is still because over 45’s have been upgrading their houses with 30 year mortgages. Money ...

4 months 1 week ago

Blue Owl Capital, a US asset manager with its eye on ‘marquee investors’ like super funds, has announced the appointment of a senior Future Fund executive as its newest m...

1 day 13 hours ago

Australia’s second-largest super fund has confirmed it is expanding its presence in the UK following significant investment in the region....

2 days 5 hours ago

While the Financial Advice Association Australia said it supports a performance testing regime “in principle”, it holds reservations about expanding this scope to retirem...

1 day 19 hours ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND