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| Regulation overkill comes full circle | | Print | |
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| Written by Anton Joseph | ||||||||
| Saturday, 09 December 2006 | ||||||||
The above quote sums it up - regulators in the US have bitten more than what they can chew.
It could not have been more coincidental. The US Committee on Capital
Markets Regulation (US Committee) issues its interim report on "Capital Market Regulation" and several
Australian governments issue even more reports on regulation:
In the wake of the above three Australian papers comes the Media Release of 6 December 2006 from the Federal Minister of Revenue and the Assistant Treasurer that amendments will be introduced to the integrity rules concerning Division 7A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth), with the view to reducing compliance costs for taxpayers. The US Committee identified the following four factors as contributing to the decline in recent interest in US capital markets:
The US Committee recognised the following disturbing trends in capital markets in the recent past:
The US Committee recommends that regulatory authorities should adopt a more risk-based process weighing the outcome benefits against the cost of compliance for businesses.
The position in Australia has been that the Federal Government and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) have been regularly consulting stakeholders and improving corporate governance and provision of financial services. The Proposals Paper is aimed at "simplifying the regulatory system and reducing unnecessary or excessive red tape". This follows a consultation paper released in April 2006.
Overviewed below are some of the significant changes in the Proposals Paper for Australian financial services law.
There will be changes to training requirements as a consequence of other proposed changes.
Apart from changes to the law relating to financial services, the Proposals Paper deals with changes that may be introduced to simplify company reporting obligations, auditor independence obligations, corporate governance, fundraising, takeovers and compliance in general. Regulation has come full circle.
Related article by Anton Joseph: Rethinking Regulation | Site search | Library downloads | Library search | Add comments |
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Commonwealth Government Proposal Paper | "