Defined Terms and Documents    

ASIC Has Ignored Its Acknowledgement In 2010 that "These Findings Have Implications For Our Regulatory Regime, which relies upon disclosure as a critical element of our consumer protection system." means:

ASIC claims that it "...strives to ensure that Australia’s financial markets are fair and transparent."

ASIC Report 224 "Access to financial advice in Australia" - December 2010 includes:

51 These results, when considered together with Australian Bureau of Statistics‘ research into Australians‘ general document literacy and numeracy,15 in particular their ability to meet the complex demands of a knowledge-based economy, suggest that about one in two Australians do not have the skills required to make informed choices in their interactions with the financial services sector.16 There is also an identifiable age link, with document proficiency tending to decrease with age.

14 For example the 2008 ANZ study of financial literacy found that ‗67% of respondents said that they understood the principle of compound interest, but only 28% were rated with a good level‘ of comprehension when they solved the problem‘, ANZ Banking Group Limited, ANZ survey of adult financial literacy in Australia, (The Social Research Centre) ANZ Banking Group, Melbourne, 2008, p. 19.

15 As part of an international study, the ABS measured skills in document literacy, prose literacy, numeracy and problem solving and found that approximately 7 million (46%) of Australians (and 7.9 million (53%) of Australians aged 15 to 74) had proficiency less than the minimum required for individuals to meet the complex demands of everyday life and work emerging in the knowledge-based economy‘ for document literacy and numeracy respectively‘, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Adult literacy and life skills survey results, cat. no. 4228.0, ABS, Canberra, 2006, p. 5.

16 These findings have implications for our regulatory regime, which relies upon disclosure as a critical element of our consumer protection system.

Yet since Dec 2010 when ASIC  made the above statements, ASIC has done nought to assist the plight of one in two Australians that do not have the skills required to make informed choices in their interactions with the financial services sector by challenging Predatory Advertising (Unconscionable Conduct) often charging Usurious Unsecured Interest Rates.