Australia's 'Hidden Epidemic': Inquiry Reveals Shocking Scale of Financial Abuse, Proposes 61 Reforms

December 5, 2024
Australia's 'Hidden Epidemic': Inquiry Reveals Shocking Scale of Financial Abuse, Proposes 61 Reforms
  • The Australian Banking Association has welcomed recommendations to change privacy laws, which would help identify and flag cases of financial abuse.

  • The report details how partners, often men, exploit financial systems to control women, including restricting access to finances and damaging credit ratings.

  • Financial professionals, including accountants and lawyers, often inadvertently facilitate financial abuse by prioritizing profit over ethical standards.

  • Social entrepreneur Catherine Fitzpatrick has urged the finance sector to implement some recommendations immediately, emphasizing the need for comprehensive legislative action.

  • Recommended reforms include redesigning joint accounts for individual access, facilitating loans for victims escaping abusive relationships, and strengthening checks for online loan applications.

  • The recommendations also urge proactive measures from governments and financial institutions to prevent financial services from being misused as tools of abuse.

  • A federal parliamentary inquiry in Australia has unveiled a 'hidden epidemic' of financial abuse, leading to the proposal of 61 recommendations aimed at addressing the issue and protecting victims.

  • Financial abuse is characterized by one person exerting control over another's finances, often manifesting through manipulative behaviors such as incurring debt in a partner's name and failing to pay child support.

  • According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, approximately 1.6 million women and 745,000 men experienced partner economic abuse in 2021/22, highlighting the widespread nature of this issue.

  • The committee expressed shock at the prevalence of financial abuse, estimating it costs victims $5.7 billion annually, with an additional economic impact of $5.2 billion, including nearly $2 billion in unpaid child support.

  • The inquiry's recommendations aim for a coordinated response from the government, financial institutions, and the legal system to effectively combat financial abuse.

  • There is a call for the legal and financial sectors to address their roles in enabling financial abuse and to uphold professional standards that protect victims.

Summary based on 3 sources


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Sources


How banks, governments will tackle $10.9b ‘hidden epidemic’

Banks, super funds called upon to end 'hidden epidemic'

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