Captured legislators and their twenty billion dollar annual superannuation cost legacy
Data(s) |
14/09/2011
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Resumo |
By December 2010 total superannuation assets had reached $1.3 trillion, covering 94% of all Australians. This substantial growth was not a natural evolution. Rather it can be directly traced to three decades of bipartisan reform strategies based on a claimed public interest ideology. This article investigates the concerns raised by Superannuation Select Committees, consumer and union organisations, independent researchers and actuarial experts that, in contrast to the public interest rhetoric, the regulatory reforms have primarily achieved major private interest gains for powerful lobbyists. The findings of this analysis indicate that the democratic power of Australian governments to set economic policy agendas has been progressively eclipsed by the power of the financial services industry's producer groups. Rather than producing a best practice governance structure, fund members remain trapped in a post-reform cost paradox: no right of exit regardless of the deepening cost burden imposed. In an industry set to control a projected nominal figure of $6.7 trillion in superannuation assets by 2035, these findings suggest that the real change necessary to improve the deepening cost burden faced by fund members within a life-long, mandatory superannuation investment is now beyond any government's reach. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia |
Relação |
DOI:10.1111/j.1835-2561.2011.00142.x Taylor, Sue (2011) Captured legislators and their twenty billion dollar annual superannuation cost legacy. Australian Accounting Review, 21(3), pp. 266-281. |
Direitos |
Copyright 2011 CPA Australia |
Fonte |
QUT Business School; School of Accountancy |
Palavras-Chave | #150199 Accounting Auditing and Accountability not elsewhere classified |
Tipo |
Journal Article |