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April 7th, 2015
Laws making it unlawful for banks to offer business banking discounts and other incentives to employers in exchange for access to employees’ superannuation are not backed up by penalties, Industry Super Australia (ISA) advice suggests.
ISA say legal advice provided to it by Arnold Bloch Leibler has confirmed that regulators have no power to seek a civil penalty for breach of section 68A of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 2003 (Cth).
Chief Executive of Industry Super Australia, David Whiteley said there was no civil penalty for breach of section 68A of the Act to deter such behaviour. Furthermore, employees have little practical recourse if their employer is persuaded to switch their super to one of the bank-owned superannuation funds which, on average, have historically produced lower net returns to members, he said.
“Given such deals are generally commercial in confidence, most employees would not be in a position to prove that incentives were offered to an employer to switch to a bank-owned product.”
A recently-published survey of 550 small and medium businesses conducted by researchers UMR found evidence of bank bundling deals:
Source: Industry Super Australia.
This publication was issued by First Super Pty Ltd (ABN 42 053 498 472, AFSL 223988), as Trustee of the First Super superannuation fund (ABN 56 286 625 181). It does not consider your personal circumstances and may not be relied on as investment advice. Content was accurate at the date of issue, but may subsequently change. You should contact us on 1300 360 988 for updated information and to obtain a copy of the product Disclosure Statement.
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