The Guardian Australia

Under the cover of Covid, Morrison wants to scrap my government's protection­s against predatory lending

- Kevin Rudd

Pardon me for being just a little suspicious, but when I see an avalanche of enthusiasm from such reputable institutio­ns as the Morrison government, the Murdoch media and the Australian Banking Associatio­n (anyone remember the Hayne royal commission?) about the proposed “reform” of the National Consumer Credit Protection Act, I smell a very large rodent. “Reform” here is effectivel­y code language for repeal. And it means the repeal of major legislatio­n introduced by my government to bring about uniform national laws to protect Australian consumers from unregulate­d and often predatory lending practices.

The banks of course have been ecstatic at Morrison’s announceme­nt, chiming in with the government’s political chimeric that allowing the nation’s lenders once again to just let it rip was now essential for national economic recovery. Westpac, whose reputation was shredded during the royal commission, was out of the blocks first in welcoming the changes: CEO Peter King said they would “reduce red tape”, “speed up the process for customers to obtain approval”, and help small businesses access credit to invest and grow.

And right on cue, Westpac shares were catapulted 7.2% to $17.54 just before midday on the day of announceme­nt. National Australia Bank was up more than 6% at $18.26, ANZ up more than 5% at $17.76, and Commonweal­th Bank was trading almost 3.5% higher at $66.49. The popping of champagne corks could be heard right around the country as the banks, once again, saw the balance of market power swing in their direction and away from consumers. And that means more profit and less consumer protection.

A little bit of history first. Back in the middle of the global financial crisis, when the banks came on bended knee to our government seeking sovereign guarantees to preserve their financial lifelines to internatio­nal lines of credit, we acted decisively to protect them, and their depositors, and to underpin the stability of the Australian financial system. And despite a hail of abuse from both the Liberal party and the Murdoch media at the time, we succeeded. Not only did we keep Australia out of the global recession then wreaking havoc across all developed economies, we also prevented any single financial institutio­n from falling over and protected every single Australian’s savings deposits. Not bad, given the circumstan­ces.

But we were also crystal-clear with the banks and other lenders at the time that we would be acting to protect working families from future predatory lending practices. And we did so. The national consumer credit protection bill 2009 (credit bill) and the national consumer credit protection (fees) bill 2009 (fees bill) collective­ly made up the consumer credit protection reform package. It included:

A uniform and comprehens­ive national licensing regime for the first time across the country for those engaging in credit activities via a new Aus

tralian credit licence administer­ed by the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission as the sole regulator;

industry-wide responsibl­e lending conduct requiremen­ts for licensees;

improved sanctions and enhanced enforcemen­t powers for the regulator; and

enhanced consumer protection through dispute resolution mechanisms, court arrangemen­ts and remedies.

This reform was not dreamed up overnight. It gave effect to the Council of Australian Government­s’ agreements of 26 March and 3 July 2008 to transfer responsibi­lity for regulation of consumer credit, and a related cluster of additional financial services, to the commonweal­th. It also implemente­d the first phase of a two-phase implementa­tion plan to transfer credit regulation to the commonweal­th endorsed by Coag on 2 October 2008. It was the product of much detailed work over more than 12 months.

Scott Morrison’s formal argument to turn all this on its head is that “as Australia continues to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic, it is more important than ever that there are no unnecessar­y barriers to the flow of credit to households and small businesses”.

But hang on. Where is Morrison’s evidence that there is any problem with the flow of credit at the moment? And if there were a problem, where is Morrison’s evidence that the proposed emasculati­on of our consumer credit protection law is the only means to improve credit flow? Neither he nor the treasurer, Josh Frydenberg, have provided us with so much as a skerrick. Indeed, the Commonweal­th Bank said recently that the flow of new lending is now a little above pre-Covid levels and that, in annual terms, lending is growing at a strong pace.

More importantl­y, we should turn to volume VI of royal commission­er Kenneth Hayne’s final report into the Australian banking industry. Hayne, citing the commonweal­th Treasury as his authority, explicitly concluded that the National Consumer Credit Protection Act has not in fact hindered the flow of credit but instead had provided system stability. As Hayne states: “I think it important to refer to a number of aspects of Treasury’s submission­s in response to the commission’s interim report. Treasury indicated that ‘there is little evidence to suggest that the recent tightening in credit standards, including through Apra’s prudential measures or the actions taken by Asic in respect of [responsibl­e lending obligation­s], has materially affected the overall availabili­ty of credit’.”

So once again, we find the emperor has no clothes. The truth is this attack on yet another of my government’s reforms has nothing to do with the macro-economy. It has everything to do with a Morrison government bereft of intellectu­al talent and policy ideas in dealing with the real challenge of national economic recovery. Just as it has everything to do with Frydenberg’s spineless yielding to the narrow interests of the banking lobby, using the Covid-19 crisis as political cover in order to lift the profit levels of the banks while throwing borrowers’ interests to the wind.

This latest flailing in the wind by Morrison et al is part of a broader pattern of failed policy responses by the government to the economic impact of the crisis. Morrison had to be dragged kicking and screaming into accepting the reality of stimulus, having rejected RBA advice last year to do precisely the same – and that was before Covid hit. And despite a decade of baseless statements about my government’s “unsustaina­ble” levels of public debt and budget deficit, Morrison is now on track to deliver five times the level of debt and six times the level of our budget deficit. But it doesn’t stop there. Having destroyed a giant swathe of the Australian manufactur­ing industry by destroying our motor vehicle industry out of pure ideology, Morrison now has the temerity to make yet another announceme­nt about the urgent need now for a new national industry policy for Australia. Hypocrisy thy name is Liberal.

Notwithsta­nding these stellar examples of policy negligence, incompeten­ce and hypocrisy, there is a further pattern to Morrison’s response to the Covid crisis: to use it as political cover to justify the introducti­on of a number of regressive measures that will hurt working families. They’ve used Covid cover to begin dismantlin­g successive Labor government reforms for our national superannua­tion scheme, the net effect of which will be to destroy the retirement income of millions of wage and salary earners. They are also on the cusp of introducin­g tax changes, the bulk of which will be delivered to those who do not need them, while further eroding the national revenue base at a time when all fiscal discipline appears to have been thrown out the window altogether. And that leaves to one side what they are also threatenin­g to do – again under the cover of Covid – to undermine wages and conditions for working families under proposed changes to our industrial relations laws.

The bottom line is that Morrison’s “reform” of the National Consumer Credit Law forms part of a wider pattern of behaviour: this is a government that is slow to act, flailing around in desperate search for a substantiv­e economic agenda to lead the nation out of recession, while using Covid to further load the dice against the interests of working families for the future.

 ?? Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP ?? ‘It is more important than ever that there are no unnecessar­y barriers to the flow of credit,’ says Scott Morrison. But, writes Kevin Rudd, the Coalition government is ‘bereft of intellectu­al talent and policy ideas in dealing with the realchalle­nge of national economic recovery’.
Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP ‘It is more important than ever that there are no unnecessar­y barriers to the flow of credit,’ says Scott Morrison. But, writes Kevin Rudd, the Coalition government is ‘bereft of intellectu­al talent and policy ideas in dealing with the realchalle­nge of national economic recovery’.

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