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Jeremy Cooper
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The Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act would be amended and the superannuation industry would be based on a new, member-focused architecture under changes flagged in the first preliminary report of the Cooper Review into superannuation.
While making clear that it would avoid publishing hard and fast recommendations on changes to the superannuation industry, the interim report has indicated a key change in direction with a new system architecture based on members rather than funds as products.
At the same time, the Cooper panel wants to make superannuation trustees more answerable to their members for the decisions they take, while it wants the performance of superannuation funds to be measured on the basis of returns to members.
And while acknowledging that Australia's superannuation system is not broken, the Cooper Review panel is insisting that change is necessary to take the industry forward over the next 15 to 20 years.
It argued that while competition has been successful in shaping the industry, there would be a continuing need for "using regulatory shaping where markets have been less effective".
In doing so, however, the Cooper panel insisted that it does not "have a general appetite for increased regulation".
On the question of governance, the panel has suggested that superannuation funds regulated by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority be subject to the same standards required of publicly-listed companies.
While the chairman of the Cooper Review, Jeremy Cooper, has made a number of references to a future superannuation industry made up of fewer but larger funds, the panel's preliminary report stated that it does not believe consolidation of the industry should be prescribed. Rather it said consolidation should occur as a matter of course, in the same manner as had occurred in the past.
The preliminary report has been broadly welcomed by the financial services industry, with the Investment and Financial Services Association (IFSA) chief executive, John Brogden, particularly welcoming the suggestion that default superannuation be opened up to all sectors.
“This will guarantee that people get the best product, rather than what is dictated by an award,” he said.
Large superannuation accounts may need to find funds outside their accounts or take the extreme step of selling non-liquid assets under the proposed $3 million super tax legislation, according to new analysis from ANU.
Economists have been left scrambling to recalibrate after the Reserve Bank wrong-footed markets on Tuesday, holding the cash rate steady despite widespread expectations of a cut.
A new Roy Morgan report has found retail super funds had the largest increase in customer satisfaction in the last year, but its record-high rating still lags other super categories.
In a sharp rebuke to market expectations, the Reserve Bank held the cash rate steady at 3.85 per cent on Tuesday, defying near-unanimous forecasts of a cut and signalling a more cautious approach to further easing.