Money

Lessons from Australia’s Financial Misconduct Shock

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Persistent and widespread misconduct has fueled distrust in the financial services sector. After an investigation lasting over a year, a commission of inquiry in Australia uncovered a shocking level of systemic malpractice and the culture of self-interest and lack of accountability that led to it. Asia-Pacific countries, where economies and services sectors are expanding rapidly, would be wise to learn from those mistakes, writes business ethics expert Eva Tsahuridu of RMIT University in Melbourne.

Lessons from Australia’s Financial Misconduct Shock
Motivated by self-interest: A royal commission headed by retired justice Kenneth Hayne (right) revealed widespread malpractice in Australia's financial services sector (Credit: left - Yakobchuk Viacheslav/Shutterstock.com, right - Commonwealth of Australia)

Trust in the financial services sector plunged around the world in the wake of the global financial crisis over a decade ago. Surveys show that the trust of investors and the general public in the industry has been rising in recent years. In its third global study of investor trust released in 2018, the CFA Institute found that, of the 3,000 retail investors in 12 markets worldwide who were surveyed, 44 percent trusted financial services, with 35 percent neutral and 21 percent distrusting the sector. In the Asia-Pacific region, trust was highest in India (71 percent) and China (70 percent) and much lower in Singapore (47 percent), Hong Kong (35 percent) and Australia (31 percent). Just 7 percent of respondents in Hong Kong and 10 percent in Singapore believed that their investment firm always put clients’ interests first.

This low level of trust is not surprising. Consider just recent regulatory action and legal investigations across the region. Last October, Chanda Kochhar quit as chief executive of ICICI Bank, one of India's largest private-sector lenders, amid an investigation into alleged conflict of interest. She and her husband were later charged with cheating and conspiracy to defraud the bank.

Early this year, South Korea’s regulator fined four global banks for illegally sharing information and making unfair price bids for derivative contracts. Banking authorities in Seoul have also investigated interest-rate collusion among the country’s four largest commercial banks. In March this year, Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) imposed a record US$100 million in fines on UBS, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and Standard Chartered Securities for failing in their duty as initial public offering sponsors. The SFC also penalized Bank of China International Securities for neglecting to follow guidelines for selling investment products. Singapore has had to crack down on financial services misconduct, mostly the misrepresentation of products.

The range of these cases and their regularity suggest that malfeasance in the industry is a widespread problem requiring constant attention. Policymakers and regulators in the region would do well to learn from the experience of Australia, where a public inquiry has uncovered egregious misconduct endemic to the industry in a country that boasts some of the most profitable banks in the world.

Led by Kenneth Hayne, a retired senior judge, the Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services began its work in December 2017 and issued its 1,069-page report in February this year. The panel received 10,323 submissions and held seven rounds of hearings that gripped and shocked the nation. Exposed were systemic misconduct, practices that have or are resulting in class actions, possible criminal prosecutions, executive and board director and chair resignations, and profit and share price crashes. More consequences are expected.

The commission revealed that unethical and illegal practices had become standard operating procedure. These included mis-selling, fraud, charging customers for services that were not provided, billing the estates of dead customers for up to a decade, paying cash bribes to win mortgage business, rigging interest rates on consumer loans, and misleading regulators or not reporting violations.

No avoiding self-interest

Many of these practices went on unimpeded in part due to conflicts of interest and close relationships between the regulator and the regulated. The commission identified these key causes for the wanton misconduct:

  • individual self-interest, aligned with the profit motive and fueled by reward structures that had no regard for clients or compliance with the law
  • asymmetry of power and knowledge between institutions and clients
  • lack of accountability for entities that broke the law.

“It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it,” the American author Upton Sinclair wrote. Adapting this to what we now understand about conflicts of interest and moral behavior, one might offer this update: It is difficult to get a person to fulfill their obligations when their self-interest depends on not fulfilling them.

Self-interest affects our perception before we are conscious of its influence. It colors what we see and how we see it. Self-interest can trump all other interests and, in most cases, the decision maker may not be aware of its influence. What the commission confirmed is that people will find a way to achieve what will benefit them.

To understand the kind of systemic misconduct that the commission uncovered, it is not sufficient to look just for bad apples, the unethical individuals. The problem is with the whole barrel – the organization itself – a place where survival and success mean doing what others are doing, what is measured and rewarded. But what mechanisms, what kind of culture, can make good people behave in ways that go against their own values and yet feel neither discomfort nor distress? Conflicts of interest and biases work mostly outside the consciousness. They are hard to discern in one’s self and to address because people think that they are not biased and thus do not have a problem like others do. They are therefore unconcerned.

The commission’s report outlines the failure of regulators to address effectively problems that were known for years, focusing on customer compensation arrangements rather than dealing with the causes of the issues – the prevailing culture in the industry – and holding to account those who did wrong. Over the years, corners were cut and no one was punished, leading to bigger corners being cut by more people. Ethics slipped down a very steep and slippery slope.

After every cycle of scandals that uncover serial misconduct, there is usually a proliferation of regulations and pledges by the authorities to focus anew on compliance. The effectiveness of these efforts will remain limited if they continue to underestimate the influence of self-interest on human behavior. The causes and cures for misconduct seem clear but the difficulty lies in swallowing the inconvenient truth that people even in institutions that may appear trustworthy or have a record that may suggest that they are deserving of trust are not as objective, ethical or impervious to malicious influence as one might hope or expect. Aligning self-interest with the fulfillment of obligations would seem to be a more constructive approach.

Organizations and their leaders, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region, where financial services sectors are growing rapidly, can avoid misconduct if they know what fuels it.

Setting prudential standards

On July 23, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), whose own culture, conduct and performance has recently been criticized, issued a draft prudential standard, which aims to clarify and strengthen remuneration requirements in the financial sector. The proposals focus on:

  • limiting financial performance measures to 50 percent of performance criteria,
  • imposing deferral periods for variable remuneration, and
  • making boards responsible for the approval of and compliance with remuneration policies.

While these proposals may be seen as reining in the extreme focus on short-term financial goals, they are unlikely to lead to the fundamental cultural shift required in the financial sector in Australia. I propose some more inspired measures that organizations should consider:

  • Employee engagement: By engaging employees through the alignment of organizational purpose with values and the leadership and enabling staff to achieve physical, cognitive and emotional fulfillment, employers can determine whether people’s fundamental human needs and concerns are satisfied at work, or whether (as is the case with 85 percent of employees globally) work is alienating and harming people and organizations.
  • Employee voice: Related to engagement and the cultivation of a “speak-up culture”, this includes metrics that provide insights into which people would say something when they see illegal and unethical practices and whether they would feel that they could contribute to making things better.
  • Ethical climate: This would entail a full and frank assessment of the climate and culture of an organization – “how we do things around here” and what really matters (who would not want to know these insights?) – which can help identify misconduct risk early before it reaches epidemic proportions.

The commission offered 76 recommendations. As many industry analysts have argued, however, the report effectively lets the banks and other financial institutions off lightly despite the widespread misconduct exposed, allowing conflicts of interest to persist. That the share prices of Australian financial institutions increased following the release of the report indicates that the market agrees with that assessment. While the financial-sector malpractices that were revealed are abhorrent and their scale, scope and systemic nature astonishing, the fact that the causes are known offers some optimism in what is a calamitous situation.

Organizations and their leaders everywhere, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region, where financial services sectors are growing rapidly, can avoid misconduct if they know what fuels it. They should learn from the mistakes that Australia made that the commission so starkly laid bare. Start measuring what matters for ethical conduct; reward achievement based on metrics of organizational and employee wellbeing; and review the effectiveness of oversight and regulatory bodies and regimes. Without such an approach, organizations will likely follow their employees down that ethical slippery slope, possibly to commercial oblivion.

 

Further reading

Brown, A J (project leader), et al. (November 2018) “Whistleblowing: New Rules, New Policies, New Vision – Work-in-progress research from the Integrity@WERQ phase – Whistling While They Work 2”, Griffith University.

Parsons, Christopher A.; Sulaeman, Johan; and Titman, Sheridan. (June 19, 2018) “The Geography of Financial Misconduct”, Journal of Finance, Vol. 73, issue 5, pp 2087-2137.

Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry. (February 1, 2019) “Final Report – Volumes 1,2 and 3”, Commonwealth of Australia.

Opinions expressed in articles published by AsiaGlobal Online reflect only those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of AsiaGlobal Online or the Asia Global Institute

Author

Eva Tsahuridu

RMIT University

Eva Tsahuridu is associate professor in the School of Accounting, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. She advises on professional and accounting ethics and served as a technical adviser to the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants. Her research interests include personal and organizational ethical conduct, whistleblowing, ethical and professional standards and philosophy of management.

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