Release of Productivity Commission Report on the Review of the National Access Regime
September 17, 2002International Monetary Fund (IMF) Report; leadership; economy
September 19, 2002TRANSCRIPT
of
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Press Conference
Canberra
Wednesday, 18 September 2002
12.15pm
SUBJECTS: Corporate Law Economic Reform Program (CLERP); Family
Tax Benefit; Iraq
TREASURER:
In June of this year the Government announced that as part of its ongoing modernisation
of Australia’s corporate law, we would be releasing the Corporate Law Economic
Reform Program No. 9 which we release today on Corporate Disclosure: Strengthening
the Financial Reporting Framework.
The Report contains around 41 proposals to strengthen corporate disclosure
and to improve the regulation of the auditing profession.
We propose to take public submissions in relation to these proposals up until
22 November of this year, thereafter prepare legislation based on these proposals
for introduction into the Parliament next year. That timetable will also give
us the chance to respond to any new recommendations that come out of the HIH
Royal Commission which is expected to report in February of next year.
The Australian system of corporations law, having been substantially modernised
through our program 1 to 6, is, in many respects, advanced on that of the United
States. For example Australia has had a system of continuous disclosure, unlike
the American system of quarterly reporting.
Nonetheless we have taken into account the serious financial collapses which
have occurred in the United States in relation to companies like Enron and WorldCom.
We have not been immune in Australia from corporate collapses which require
lessons to be learned and responses to be made. And I talk in particular of
HIH where the Government has called a Royal Commission.
With the exception of HIH it is not apparent that there has been substantial
auditing failure in Australia. The Royal Commission is still to consider the
role of the auditors in relation to HIH. And so I leave that to one side.
Nonetheless, we think it is timely that the system of regulation in respect
of auditors be improved. We have set up in this country a Financial Reporting
Council which has a majority of non-professional representatives on it, that
is, it represents the stakeholders with nominees from the Australian Shareholders
Association, the Australian Stock Exchange, nominees from the investment community,
which currently oversee accounting standards. We are going to give the Financial
Reporting Council the role of overseeing auditors and auditing standards which
will be given the force of law. And in relation to those auditing standards,
this body, which has a majority not from the auditing profession, will have
the power to overlook auditors and their role. And disciplinary proceedings
will be taken through the Companies Auditors and Liquidators Disciplinary Board.
We will make Audit Committees mandatory for Australia’s top 500 companies.
We will make audit partner rotation compulsory after 5 years.
We will require a report by a company of all non-audit services which are provided
by its audit firm.
We will require Audit Committees to certify that the receipt of non-audit services
did not compromise audit independence.
We will enhance the continuous disclosure provisions, which as I said, are
in my view and I think in the view of many observers, substantially in excess
of what is required in the United States.
And we will give additional powers to the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission to enforce those rules by issuing infringement penalties.
In addition to all of those matters, we will strengthen the law to prevent
retaliation against an employee who in good faith reports to the corporate regulator
what they suspect to be a contravention of the law, in the interests of encouraging
disclosure and enhancing information to shareholders. Australia has thoroughly
modernised its corporations law through the program that we put in place commencing
in 1996, much of which has been overseen by Senator Ian Campbell, my Parliamentary
Secretary, who has done a magnificent job in relation to that process and in
addition, in relation to this series of proposals.
It has been acknowledged that our corporations law is as good as any other
in the world and certainly in advance of that of the United States. But we want
to make sure that we stay on the leading edge of developments, that in areas
where we require further modernisation we put in place a series of proposals
which will enhance disclosure, protect shareholders, whilst not at the same
time reducing the capacity of corporations to get on with business and to return
profits.
The CLERP paper No. 9, I believe, strikes the right balance. I encourage the
professions, the business community and all interested stakeholders to respond
to the Government by November. And the Government proposes, after taking into
account those comments, to deal further with these matters with legislation
in the course of next year.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, did you consider at all as part of the (inaudible) having a ban
on a company, on an audit company providing non-audit services to the same company,
and if you did, why did you not go with that?
TREASURER:
Well, we did consider that. And the, as I understand the situation in the United
States, they introduced a ban which the SEC can relieve you of. So you go bit
by bit back to the SEC for an exemption. The proposal that we came to was a
proposal not to ban it, but to require the reporting to shareholders and to
require the Audit Committee to actually make a statement to the shareholders
as I say in relation to the press release, to certify that it did not compromise
audit independence. So we think that putting that right up front, making it
absolutely clear, requiring an Audit Committee to certify it, will prohibit
situations where there is any conflict of interest and it will enhance the disclosure
to the shareholders rather than have piece by piece this matter being considered
by your corporate regulator, to put it on the record and to empower shareholders
and analysts in relation to that situation.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, would there potentially be any penalty for company directors who
had certified that, and it was subsequently found that there had been some compromise?
TREASURER:
Oh yes, if a company director certifies something that was not the case, that
is a breach of the director’s duty and the company director could expect stiff
enforcement action to be taken against that company director.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, can I ask on another matter about the Treasury discussion paper,
the Government bond market and the future of that, can we expect something soon?
TREASURER:
Yes, we can. I’m attending the Commonwealth Finance Ministers’ meeting next
week and the World Bank IMF annual meeting on the weekend, whether or not I
can get the paper out before we go, I’m not sure. But if we don’t, we probably
won’t, it will be shortly after I get back from the annual meeting of the IMF
and World Bank.
What we will be doing, is, we will be forming a consultative group, which will
involve operators in the market and we’ll also be asking for public discussion
on the question as to whether the Commonwealth needs to maintain Commonwealth
Government securities on issue and if it does, the amount of liquidity that
would be required and correspondingly how we would run an asset portfolio. That’s
one alternative. The other alternative of course is not to maintain Commonwealth
Government securities and not to run an asset portfolio. There are pros and
cons of each position. I want to have full consultation before making a decision.
There is no urgency to making the decision. We are a running a portfolio. We
will continue to run a portfolio in the near future. This problem only arises
if we get to a situation where we can retire all of the Commonwealth’s debt.
That is obviously not going to happen in the immediate future.
As I have said earlier, this is a problem that many countries would love to
have. Let’s not get too worried about the immediacy of this. We have got time
for a full and proper debate and that is what we will do.
JOURNALIST:
Are you canvassing the possibility that the Government may hold a stock of
shares?
TREASURER:
Well there are two alternatives. If we were in a position, and I underline
`if’, where we could retire net debt, we could do one of two things. We could
not have securities on issue, that is have no debt. Or alternatively, we could
have a gross position, which would have our securities out there, which would
be matched by an asset position. They’re the two alternatives. And I’m not announcing
which of those we would do, if, underlining if, the situation arises, but I’ll
certainly be taking consultation with interested market players and others when
we put out a position paper in relation to this.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, if CLERP 9’s proposals were in fact the law, do you believe that
the HIH collapse wouldn’t have happened?
TREASURER:
Well the thing about HIH, we’ve got a Royal Commission, which is going to give
us an explanation as to why the HIH collapse occurred, and I don’t want to prejudge
it. It could have occurred for a number of reasons. It could have occurred because
the directors were at fault. It could have occurred because there were unforeseen
investment or insurance issues. It could have had some relation to the auditors.
The Royal Commission has not taken evidence in relation to the auditors yet,
so I can’t prejudge that question. Let’s suppose it came to the conclusion that
there was some contribution from the auditors, then you would have to look at
whether there would have been a system of regulation that could have prevented
it. Can I make this point? The law is never going to ban corporate collapses.
You can’t pass a law saying no company shall ever collapse. Companies, you know,
from now until the end of time will collapse for whole series of reasons. It
may be because their product is a product that no-one wants to buy. It may be
because they’re undercapitalised. It may be that the people that are running
it don’t have sufficient enterprise. You can’t just look at a corporate collapse
and say, somebody is engaged in malfeasance. Now as we look at the evidence
coming out of HIH, the Royal Commission’s been a very interesting Royal Commission,
I’m not going to prejudge, it has, I think, uncovered some very interesting
evidence. It hasn’t started in relation to auditors yet, but we’ll get its report
and then we’ll know the outcome.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, to what extent has this Report not picked up the recommendations
of the Ramsay Report and where it hasn’t picked them up, what was the reason
for that?
TREASURER:
I think it goes much further than the Ramsay Report. The Ramsay Report was
a good report and we picked up all of the recommendations of the Ramsay Report
in the sense of having an independent board that’s responsible for auditing
standards, not comprised of stakeholders.
As it turned out we already had such a Board, and it was the Financial Reporting
Council and it had its responsibilities in relation to accounting standards
and we’re now going to extend that to auditing standards. But this goes much
further than Ramsay in other significant areas. In relation to disclosure, in
relation to the penalties, in relation to analysts, in relation to a whole host
of areas so, and this is not to say that Professor Ramsay’s report was not useful,
it was very useful. But as things developed in relation to the United States,
we thought it was necessary to pick up those Ramsay matters and go further,
and this goes very substantially further.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, the US remedy for this sort of problem will involve a steep hike
in penalties, is that something that you’re envisaging as well.
TREASURER:
In relation to continuous disclosure, you’ve got to remember that the United
States doesn’t even have continuous disclosure, but in relation to continuous
disclosure for bodies corporate, we’re increasing the penalty to $1 million
from $200, 000. In addition to that we are also introducing the power for ASIC
to take proceedings against other persons, not just the corporation but other
persons that may have breached their duty of continuous disclosure. And in addition
to that we are introducing a new power for ASIC to lodge penalties for infringement,
if you like, an on-the-spot fine. Now you can contest that if you don’t like
the on-the-spot fine, you can go to court like you can with a traffic infringement,
but a new power for an on-the-spot fine and in addition to that, we’re also
enhancing the powers to actually require an explanation of externally generated
rumours that may be affecting a stock price.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, how do you, on another matter, how do you respond to Labor’s claims
that the changes, the sort of changes, the fine tuning to your Family Tax Benefits
for families are just a bandaid solution that is basically saying to families,
well you should take less money now, so you don’t get a debt later?
TREASURER:
The point about the Family Tax Benefit is this, that those people that
are asked to re-pay money are asked to re-pay it because for one reason or another
they have been overpaid, there is no dispute about that. You are not asked to
repay money unless you have been overpaid. If all you have been paid is your
just entitlements you are not being asked to repay. And so what the Government
says, it has put in place new options which will prevent the overpayment occurring
so that people do not get the money and are then asked to pay it back. So, it
is a pretty silly criticism isn’t it, to say a proposal to prevent the overpayment
is a bad idea. The prevention of the overpayment is the necessary pre-condition
to doing away with the need for the repayment after the event.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, since, in the wake of Enron and HIH, accountants have done a lot
of soul searching and come up with a lot of recommendations about how to improve
their own image. Do you expect that their Review of analyst’s independence to
be the more contentious part of this Review?
TREASURER:
The analysts’ independence is an issue that has come up particularly in the
United States where it has been said that there were analysts that were recommending
that stocks be bought at the same time as their firm was selling stocks, and
that the market should have been informed. And the requirements that we have
in this will require these analysts to disclose conflicts of interest out to
the market. I think people are entitled to know that. I hope it is not controversial,
I hope that analysts agree with us on this but we will wait to see whether or
not they do.
JOURNALIST:
Can I ask you about two thing here you said just before. One was that there
will be a requirement for continuous disclosure from people who are not directors,
can you explain what that is…
TREASURER:
Well not from, not the corporation. People who are, who have an obligation,
suppose the CEO or company secretary, if it is found that they have breached
the duty of continuous disclosure they can be subject indeed to action. So it
is not just the corporation, we are putting this obligation of continuous disclosure
back on officials, officers of the company as well.
JOURNALIST:
An explanation of rumours, how broadly does that go? Does that mean journalists
are going to be hauled before ASIC to explain…?
TREASURER:
I wish they were Sid, it would be a matter of great regret if they were not.
But, what I mean by that is, you will quite often see movement in a stock because
a rumour is around let us say, that the Chairman is going to resign or the corporation
is going to be split up or something like that. And what it will do is it will
empower the asking of the corporation for an explanation to the market. Now
the explanation may well be, this is untrue, there is no basis. But it is not
directed at journalists. It is directed at the corporation to actually respond
to matters that might be out in the marketplace that are affecting share prices.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, can I ask you, can I ask you about the debate that is going on in
the Parliament at the moment which I don’t think you have contributed to yet,
are you…
TREASURER:
Iraq?
JOURNALIST:
Yes.
TREASURER:
I spoke this morning.
JOURNALIST:
I am sorry. I missed it… it has been a long day so far. What is the…
TREASURER:
Your life will be enriched by reading it I assure you.
JOURNALIST:
Oh don’t worry I will go straight back and do it. Given the move of Iraq yesterday,
what is your view about sticking with the UN processes now or should there be
another element to any kind of UN resolution that gives, that allows, some kind
of unilateral action, military action eventually by the US?
TREASURER:
When the UN first, back in 1991, passed a resolution calling for the destruction
of weapons of mass destruction and the capacity to deliver them beyond one hundred
and fifty kilometres, and international verification – Iraq accepted that –
it said it would accept that and allow inspectors in. And for the next 7 years
or so there was a program of delay, of obfuscation, and eventually in 1998 they
just refused to comply anymore. I refer to that to say that the making of the
promise the inspectors will be allowed in is not the delivery of the objective.
The delivery of the objective is full cooperation until such time as all those
weapons of mass destruction are taken out of existence. So we can welcome the
fact that a statement has been made to say inspections will be allowed, but
such a statement has been made previously, and it hasn’t led to the dismantling
of those weapons of mass destruction. The important thing here, I think, is
full cooperation in the inspection and the dismantling of the weapons. That
is the critical thing and that’s what the International Community will have
to be very sure about, and it’s too early at the moment to say what would have
to be done if there is a program of obfuscation and delay and non compliance.
But I just say the thing is not solved by a statement to that effect.
JOURNALIST:
I guess I am asking, should the UN resolution cover that option, should it
go beyond…?
TREASURER:
I think the UN will be very minded I think as to what will have to be done
to ensure compliance and I’m sure that will be a matter of great discussion
and debate and I’m sure that is very much on the minds of everybody that is
feeling this in New York and we’ll wait to see what comes out of it.
Thanks very much, Thank you.