Introductory Info
Date introduced: 5 December 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Treasury
Commencement: Schedule 1 and Schedule 2, Part 3 commence the day after Royal Assent. Schedule 2, Part 1 commences on the later of the day after Royal Assent or 1 April 2021. Schedule 2, Part 2 commences immediately after Schedule 2, Part 1.
The Bills Digest at a glance
The National Consumer Credit
Protection Amendment (Mandatory Credit Reporting and Other Measures) Bill 2019
(the Bill) amends the National Consumer
Credit Protection Act 2009 (Consumer Credit Act) to establish a
comprehensive credit reporting regime. The mandatory regime will require large
Authorised Deposit-taking Institutions (ADIs) to provide comprehensive credit
information on consumer credit accounts to certain credit reporting bodies.
Schedule 1 achieves this purpose through provisions that
substantially repeat the provisions of the lapsed National
Consumer Credit Protection Amendment (Mandatory Comprehensive Credit Reporting)
Bill 2018 (the 2018 Bill)[1]
amending the Consumer Credit Act, as well as making consequential
amendments to the Privacy
Act 1988 . The 2018 Bill lapsed at the end of the 45th Parliament, on 1
July 2019.
The Bill requires large ADIs and certain other credit
providers to supply comprehensive credit information to eligible credit
reporting bodies—of which there are currently three.
The information that must be provided includes:
- identification
information, including name, date of birth and address
- consumer
credit liability information, including the name of the credit provider, type
of consumer credit, and maximum amount of credit available
- repayment
history information, including whether or not an individual is obliged to make
monthly payments in relation to a consumer credit agreement, and when those
payments are due and payable
- default
information, including information about payments that are overdue, and steps
taken to recover the overdue amounts
- payment
information including information about payments of overdue amounts that have
been made by an individual and
- new
arrangement information, including information about variations to a consumer
credit agreement.
The information is initially to be provided in two
tranches commencing on 1 April 2020 and 1 April 2021 respectively.
Schedule 2 of the Bill contains new amendments to the Privacy
Act establishing a financial hardship information scheme under that Act, as
well as other matters. Schedule 2 also contains related amendments to the Consumer
Credit Act. The proposed amendments will have the effect of permitting
credit reporting bodies to collect, use, disclose and retain financial hardship
information. This is not currently permitted.
The amendments will also permit credit providers to
disclose financial hardship information to credit reporting bodies.
The proposed changes include certain safeguards for the
financial hardship information scheme, such as a one year retention period,
security requirements and an independent review of the system to be completed by
1 October 2023.
Purpose of
the Bill
The primary purpose of the National Consumer Credit
Protection Amendment (Mandatory Credit Reporting and Other Measures) Bill 2019
(the Bill) is to amend the National Consumer
Credit Protection Act 2009 (Consumer Credit Act) to establish a
comprehensive credit reporting regime. The mandatory regime will require large
Authorised Deposit-taking Institutions (ADIs) to provide comprehensive credit
information on consumer credit accounts to certain credit reporting bodies.
Schedule 1 achieves this purpose through provisions that
substantially repeat the provisions of the lapsed National
Consumer Credit Protection Amendment (Mandatory Comprehensive Credit Reporting)
Bill 2018 (the 2018 Bill)[2]
amending the Consumer Credit Act, as well as making consequential
amendments to the Privacy
Act 1988. The 2018 Bill lapsed at the end of the 45th Parliament, on 1
July 2019.
Schedule 2 contains new amendments to the Privacy Act
dealing with how financial hardship arrangements and information are to be
dealt with under that Act, as well as other matters. Schedule 2 also contains
related amendments to the Consumer Credit Act.
Accordingly, this Bills Digest substantially reproduces the
Bills Digest prepared for the 2018 Bill by Paula Pyburne, with updated and
additional commentary where required by new material that has been introduced
in the Bill.
Background
Licensing arrangements
The Consumer Credit Act, which contains the National Credit Code, applies to credit contracts entered into, on,
or after 1 July 2010[3]
where:
- the lender is in the business of providing credit
- a charge is made for providing the credit
- the debtor is a natural person or strata
corporation
- the credit is provided:
- for personal, domestic or household purposes or
- to purchase, renovate or improve residential property for investment
purposes, or to refinance credit previously provided for this purpose.[4]
Under the Consumer Credit Act a person cannot
engage in a credit activity if the person does not hold an Australian credit
licence (AC licence).[5]
Establishing the credit reporting framework
The collection, use and disclosure of personal information
in Australia is regulated by the Privacy Act.
In 1991, Part IIIA was inserted into the Privacy Act
to extend its operation to consumer credit reporting.[6]
It provides a framework for the collection, disclosure and use of
credit-related information. The credit reporting provisions in Part IIIA
facilitate the sharing of credit-related information between credit providers
and credit reporting bodies. At present there are three credit reporting bodies
in Australia—Equifax, Experian and Illion (formerly Dun and Bradstreet).[7]
Initially, the information that was shared related to
‘negative’ credit events.[8]
Negative reporting limits the collection of personal
information to that which relates to an individual’s credit delinquency, such
as defaults on payments or dishonoured cheques, and inquiries on the credit
record. Positive credit reporting permits the collection of personal
information which demonstrates an individual’s credit account activity, such as
the timeliness of payments, account type, the credit limit and the amounts of
credit liabilities.[9]
However the enactment of the Privacy Amendment
(Enhancing Privacy Protection) Act 2012 (2012 Amending Act),
(in response to a report by the Australian Law Reform Commission)[10]
amongst other things:
- set
out five new kinds of personal information which would be reported and
- did
away with the concepts of ‘negative’ and ‘positive’ reporting, and instead
introduced the concept of ‘comprehensive’ reporting.
Comprehensive credit reporting will give credit providers
access to additional personal information to assist them in establishing an
individual’s credit worthiness. The additional personal information will allow
credit providers to make a more robust assessment of credit risk and assist
credit providers to meet their responsible lending obligations. It is expected
that this will lead to decreased levels of over-indebtedness and lower credit
default rates. More comprehensive credit reporting is also expected to improve
competition and efficiency in the credit market, which may result in reductions
to the cost of credit for individuals.[11]
Those amendments did not commence until 12 March 2014.
Regulatory code
An industry-developed regulatory code for Australia’s
credit reporting system was approved by the Office of the Australian
Information Commissioner in 2014.[12]
Participation in the expanded system was voluntary, with information being
shared on a reciprocal basis (participants have access only to the types of
information that they themselves have shared). The Australian Retail Credit
Association formalised this arrangement through the Principles
of Reciprocity and Data Exchange, which were approved by the Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) in December 2015.[13]
Notably, principle three:
... ensures that data meets a certain standard before it is
exchanged, by requiring that shared data adheres to the Australian Credit
Reporting Data Standard (ACRDS). The standardised system means that data
is communicated in a way that it can be universally understood by other
signatories to the PRDE [Principles of Reciprocity and Data Exchange].[14]
Current information shared
In the current voluntary credit reporting regime, credit
providers (such as financial services firms and utility providers) and credit
reporting bodies are permitted to share information related to:
- a
credit provider having sought a credit report (from a credit bureau) in
relation to an application for credit by an individual, and the amount of the
credit sought
- an
individual’s current credit providers
- any
credit defaults (which is the failure to meet legal repayment obligations) in
the previous five years
- a
credit provider’s opinion that an individual had committed a serious credit
infringement (such as credit fraud)
- the
type of credit account opened
- the
date the account was opened
- the
current limit of the account
- the
date on which the account was closed.[15]
In addition, ASIC-licensed credit providers are permitted
to share information related to payment history, including:
- whether
the individual was meeting their payment obligations and
- the
number of repayment cycles the individual was in arrears.[16]
From voluntary to mandatory
Responsible
lending obligations
All holders of a credit licence must comply with the responsible
lending obligations.[17]
The responsible lending obligations are aimed at better informing consumers and
preventing them from being in unsuitable credit contracts. In particular:
- before
providing credit assistance to a consumer, a licensee must make a preliminary
assessment about whether the contract will be unsuitable for the consumer. To
do this, the licensee must make inquiries and verifications about the
consumer’s requirements, objectives and financial situation[18]
and
- a
licensee is prohibited from providing credit assistance to a consumer in
relation to a credit contract if the contract will be unsuitable for the
consumer.[19]
Lenders are not able to fulfil
the responsible lending obligations where they have incomplete or inaccurate
information about the creditworthiness of a potential borrower.
Recommendations for change
Financial System Inquiry
In December 2014, the Treasurer released the final report of
Financial System Inquiry 2014 (known as the Murray Inquiry after the chair of
the review, former CEO of the Commonwealth Bank David Murray AO) which examined
the Australian financial system.[21]
Amongst other things, the Murray Inquiry acknowledged that,
as the legislation which underpinned comprehensive credit reporting had come
into effect in March 2014, the regime had not, at that time, been fully
implemented. Nevertheless it noted:
Participation in [comprehensive credit reporting] is
voluntary, so the pace and extent of eventual participation in the regime is
not yet clear.
For credit providers, participation will depend on the
perceived net benefits, which will differ between different classes of credit
provider. For a major institution with a relatively large customer base, early
and full participation may provide, at least initially, relatively larger
benefits to other, smaller participants than for the institution itself.
As participation and system-wide data grow, net benefits
increase for all CCR participants. Further credit providers that do not
participate are at risk of adverse selection with respect to potential new
borrowers; a risk that becomes more acute as industry participation increases.[22]
Accordingly, the Murray Inquiry recommended that the
Government ‘support industry efforts to expand credit data sharing’ and if
‘participation is inadequate, Government should consider legislating mandatory
participation’.[23]
Productivity Commission inquiry
The Productivity Commission released its final report of its
inquiry into data availability and use in March 2017.[24]
For the purposes of that report, the Productivity Commission
characterised financial data as information that is created in the provision
and consumption of financial products and services, as well as data generated
in the course of government regulation and supervision of the financial system.[25]
The Productivity Commission considered whether
comprehensive credit reporting should be made mandatory or should remain
voluntary. It considered that there were ‘compelling reasons to mandate
participation in CCR’.[26]
Amongst other things, the perceived benefits of
comprehensive credit reporting are:
- additional
availability of credit-related information would improve credit allocation and
pricing so that at least some consumers would be able to access cheaper loans
- allowing
smaller financial businesses and potential new entrants to have access to a
large pool of customer data may help to facilitate their entry into the market,
which could boost competition and innovation in the finance sector[27]
- if
data collected and stored by credit providers is viewed as jointly owned with
the customer then the customer should be allowed to share the data with third
parties, including for the purposes of a credit assessment, regardless of
whether their credit provider wishes to participate in CCR.[28]
On the other hand, compulsory comprehensive credit
reporting ‘would impose costs on all finance sector businesses legally obliged
to participate in the scheme’.[29]
In addition, the much greater volumes of data could give rise to ‘data quality
issues’.[30]
The Productivity Commission recommended:
The Australian Government should adopt a minimum target
for voluntary participation in Comprehensive Credit Reporting of 40% of all
active credit accounts, provided by Australian Securities and Investments
Commission (ASIC)-licensed credit providers, for which comprehensive data is
supplied to the credit bureaux in public mode. If this target is not achieved
by 30 June 2017, the Government should circulate draft legislation by 31
December 2017, to impose mandatory participation in Comprehensive Credit
Reporting (including the reporting of repayment history) by ASIC-licensed
credit providers in 2018.[31]
[emphasis added]
Move to a mandatory system
As stated above, the legislation to facilitate a voluntary
system of comprehensive credit reporting commenced in March 2014. However, in
September 2017, it was reported that ‘the figure for voluntary participation in
a CCR framework is less than one per cent, and the dial has barely
shifted for years’.[32]
The Government committed to implementing the
recommendation of the Productivity Commission in the 2017–18 Budget.[33]
In November 2017, the Government announced that it would legislate for a
mandatory comprehensive credit reporting regime to come into effect by
1 July 2018, on the grounds that the 40 per cent target would not be met.
According to then Treasurer, Scott Morrison:
The four major banks will be the first to face the mandated
reporting, given they account for approximately 80 per cent of the volume of
lending to households.[34]
The 2018
Bill
The 2018 Bill[35]
contained provisions amending the Privacy Act and the Consumer Credit
Act to mandate a comprehensive consumer credit reporting scheme. The 2018
Bill lapsed at the end of the 45th Parliament, on 1 July 2019, and its provisions
are now reintroduced with slight alterations in Schedule 1 of the present Bill.
Financial
hardship arrangements scheme
In addition to the provisions in Schedule 1 that reproduce
the provisions of the 2018 Bill, Schedule 2 of the Bill introduces amendments
to the Privacy Act and the Consumer Credit Act to establish a
scheme for reporting of financial hardship information in the credit reporting
system.
The amendments to implement the financial hardship
reporting arrangements were developed following concerns raised in submissions made
in response to the 2018 Bill and a review conducted by the Attorney-General’s
Department over 2018–19.[36]
Most submitters to the Economics Committee inquiry into
the 2018 Bill expressed concern about the interaction between the mandatory
credit information and the hardship provisions which are contained in
Part 4 of the National Credit Code.
There was a difference of opinion between submitters about the extent of
reporting obligations when a debtor is in hardship. That issue lies with the
requirement to provide the repayment history information which
includes information about the day on which a monthly payment is due and
payable and the meaning of that term.
There was a view that unless a credit default has already
been listed on a consumer’s credit report, entering into a financial hardship
arrangement should not affect a credit report because the consumer has come to
a mutually acceptable arrangement to pay their debt.[37] To assist debtors
guidelines have been published by the Office of the Australian Information
Commissioner.[38]
Following the review of financial hardship arrangements
undertaken by the Attorney-General’s Department, the Attorney-General issued a
media release on 2 August 2019, outlining details of the Government’s proposed amendments:
New credit reporting arrangements will improve transparency
for credit providers of customers who have entered into financial hardship
arrangements and enable people experiencing financial difficulty to demonstrate
good credit behaviour by complying with the hardship arrangement...
Currently, due to provisions in the Privacy Act, when a
person is engaged in a hardship arrangement with one credit provider, this
arrangement cannot be disclosed to other credit providers. This has seen
circumstances arise where people who are struggling to repay one credit
provider, are provided with another line of credit from a different provider.
The changes announced today aim to address this situation and provide these
people with more confidence to apply for hardship.
“Proposed changes to the Privacy Act will make sensible
changes to allow for transparent and responsible lending practices where people
are subject to hardship arrangements,” Attorney-General, Christian Porter said.
...
“Draft legislation will be released shortly to enable public
consultation on the proposed changes which will introduce a new category of
information within credit reporting, enabling hardship information to be
reported alongside repayment history information.
“Under the proposed changes, hardship indicators will
identify where a hardship arrangement is in place and whether a consumer is
making payments in accordance with that arrangement.
“A separate indicator will show where there has been an
agreed permanent variation to a credit contract. Hardship information will be
subject to the same protections as repayment history information concerning
collection, use and disclosure under the Privacy Act, but will be subject to a
shorter retention period.
...
“Importantly, while hardship information will appear on a
consumer’s credit report, credit reporting bodies will be prohibited from using
hardship information to calculate a consumer’s credit score.”[39]
Treasury then conducted a consultation process on an
exposure draft of the proposed amendments between August and September 2019.[40]
Submissions to that process have not been made public.
Committee
consideration
The Selection of Bills Committee recommended that
the Bill not be referred to Committee for inquiry and report.[41] The Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills (Scrutiny of Bills Committee) made
no comment on the Bill.[42]
However, the following Committees commented on the 2018
Bill.
Senate Standing Committee on Economics
The 2018 Bill was referred to the Senate Standing
Committee on Economics (Economics Committee) for inquiry and report by 29 May
2018.[43]
The Economics Committee recommended that the 2018 Bill be
passed and that the Government ‘consider expediting its review of financial
hardship arrangements’.[44]
Labor Senators on the Committee made additional comments, advising that they were
‘cautiously supportive’ of the measures in the Bill, but would:
... take a very careful look at both the government's approach
to regulating the use of consumer financial data and whether any benefits of
mandatory comprehensive credit reporting will flow through to consumers.[45]
Labor Senators recommended that the 2018 Bill be amended
to delay the first stage requirement by 12 months to 1 July 2019 ‘in order
to allow the Attorney-General's Department to complete its review of financial
hardship arrangements and for the government to provide a response to this
review’.[46]
The comments by submitters to the Economics Committee are
canvassed below.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee commented on the 2018 Bill
in its report of 9 May 2018.[47]
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee acknowledged the
importance of improving the administration of Australia's credit reporting
regime. However, it expressed concern that requiring the disclosure of
mandatory credit information has the potential to unduly trespass on the
privacy of individuals—particularly the customers of the large ADIs
contemplated by the Bill, as the information required to be disclosed includes
a substantial amount of personal and financial information about individuals.[48]
Additional comments made by the Scrutiny of Bills Committee are canvassed below
under the heading ‘Key issues and provisions’.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
In addition to the comments relating to the 2018 Bill by
Labor senators on the Economics Committee, discussed above, the following
comments have been made by non-government parties or independents in relation
to the Bill.
Labor members indicated support for the Bill in the House
of Representatives. However an intention was indicated to possibly introduce
amendments in the Senate to allow individuals to access credit information more
readily.[49]
Centre Alliance supports the Bill, but has expressed
concerns regarding the financial hardship arrangements scheme in Schedule 2,
echoing the concerns of various consumer groups as discussed below:
... we are concerned that the hardship arrangement indicators
scheme, as outlined in schedule 2, may lead to unfair outcomes for people who
are financially vulnerable. However, it has been noted by both the Financial
Rights Legal Centre and the Consumer Action Law Centre that the retention of
hardship information for a period of 12 months may ultimately mean people are
less likely to reach out to credit providers to help for fear of having a
hardship flag placed on their file. As noted by the Financial Rights Legal
Centre, this may have a perverse impact on those families and businesses that
are coming to terms with the financial consequences of the bushfires.[50]
Position of
major interest groups
Arguments for compulsory credit reporting
A 2015 report by KPMG to the Australian Retail Credit
Association outlines, amongst other things, the reasons for improved credit
data exchange in the following terms:
The exchange of credit data between financial institutions is
important to the ability of financial institutions to manage their credit
risk—that is, the risk of loss arising from the default by a borrower in
respect of money lent by the financial institution. Credit risk is the single
largest financial risk faced by most banks and other lenders. Reflecting this,
most episodes of bank distress or failure globally have arisen primarily
because of inadequate management of credit risk. The management of credit risk
is the single biggest factor that influences the prudential soundness of
individual financial institutions and the stability of the financial system. [51]
Generally, submitters to the Economics Committee inquiry
accepted that there are sound reasons for mandatory comprehensive credit
reporting on economic grounds—although there were some qualifications.
The Australian Banking Association welcomed the removal of
the existing information asymmetry between credit providers and credit
applicants. Citing the New Zealand (NZ) model of comprehensive credit
reporting, it noted that benefits identified in the NZ regime included:
- giving
credit providers a more accurate and complete picture of individuals’ credit
worthiness, allowing them to make better assessments of risk and facilitate a
more responsible lending decision
- increasing
competition in the credit industry by enabling access to better information and
- opening
mainstream credit to a wider pool of individuals who may otherwise be excluded
due to a lack of verifiable information about them.[52]
Similarly, Dr Andrew Grant of the University of Sydney
Business School stated that the ‘introduction of credit sharing should improve
the amount of loans funded and the cost of loan funding for good borrowers’.[53]
Arguments against compulsory credit reporting
Problems for lower income applicants
The other side of that coin is addressed in the submission
by the Queensland Law Society (QLS) to the Economics Committee. QLS
acknowledged that the measures in the Bill enhance the ability of consumer
credit providers to lend responsibly. However, the submission expressed concern
that comprehensive credit reporting ‘may result in lower income applicants
being charged more for credit due to greater differential pricing based on more
available information’.[54]
The Financial Rights Legal Centre agreed, stating:
... some lenders are likely to use this increased information
not to deny people credit where it appears their finances are already
stretched, but to charge those customers more for credit. We may see a
significant increase in price discrimination including an influx of expensive,
priced-for-risk products, such as credit cards charging up to 48 per cent per
annum for those deemed risky.[55]
Security of data
Of concern to some submitters was the need for enhanced
privacy protections relating to notification, data quality, access and correction,
and complaints.[56]
According to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner, ‘robust
information handling practices will be essential to ensure the success and
sustainability of this initiative’ ... ‘the Bill envisages active oversight by
the OAIC, particularly of security issues arising in the mandatory
comprehensive credit reporting system’.[57]
According to one commentator, requiring the banks to
release loan data to third parties increases the risk of data breaches.[58]
For example in 2017 US credit bureau Equifax was subjected to a cyber-attack
affecting over 143 million Americans.[59]
The data breach has led to increased risks of identity fraud and targeted
scams.
Financial
hardship arrangements scheme
In a joint submission led by the Financial Rights Legal
Centre to the Attorney-General’s Department review of financial hardship
arrangements discussed above, various consumer groups recommended against the
recording of financial hardship information on consumer credit reports.[60]
In particular, the submission notes ‘that any additional information permitted
to be shared or held as part of the credit reporting system is inherently a
further privacy intrusion and must be clearly justified in the public interest’
and that this presents the risk of discouraging consumers from seeking hardship
assistance.[61]
The submission states that if hardship is to be included in credit reports then
regulatory controls should also be introduced to appropriately limit the uses
of the information, for example to assessing new credit applications and not
for pricing credit.[62]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory
Memorandum states that the Bill will have nil financial impact for the
Government.[63]
However it is estimated that the ‘average regulatory cost
associated with the mandatory credit reporting requirements is $8.2 million’.[64]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed
the Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or
declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[65]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
In consideration of the present Bill, the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights (Human Rights Committee) had no comment.[66]
The Human Rights Committee commented on the 2018 Bill in
its report of 8 May 2018.[67]
The starting point for its consideration was Article 17 of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
which prohibits arbitrary or unlawful interferences with an individual's
privacy.[68]
The right to privacy includes respect for informational privacy, including the
right to respect for private and confidential information, particularly the
collection, storing, use and sharing of such information. The Human Rights
Committee noted that the introduction of a mandatory comprehensive credit
reporting scheme engages the right to privacy by requiring large ADIs to supply
comprehensive credit information to certain credit reporting bodies.[69]
The Human Rights Committee acknowledged:
Limitations on the right to privacy will be permissible where
they are prescribed by law and are not arbitrary, they pursue a legitimate
objective, are rationally connected to (that is, effective to achieve) that
objective and are a proportionate means of achieving that objective.[70]
The Human Rights Committee noted, amongst other things,
the safeguards that were in place to protect individuals' credit information in
the 2012 Amending Act but was not satisfied that the Privacy Act
would ‘constitute an effective safeguard for the purposes of the right to
privacy in the context of this particular measure’.[71]
The Committee asked the Minister for additional
information about the Bill. In particular, it sought information about whether
the requirement to provide comprehensive credit information is sufficiently
circumscribed, and information as to the adequacy and effectiveness of
safeguards.[72]
The Minister responded to explain the objective of the
measures and the safeguards limiting both the amount of data to be collected
and the purposes to which it could be used, and the Human Rights Committee
responded that ‘having regard to the information provided by the minister as to
the safeguards in place to protect the right to privacy, the committee
considers that the measure is likely to be a proportionate limitation on the
right to privacy’.[73]
Key issues
and provisions: Schedule 1—main amendments
Entities supplying credit information
Item 4
of Schedule 1 of the Bill inserts proposed
Part 3‑2CA—Licensees
supplying credit information to credit reporting bodies into the Consumer Credit Act. Part 3-2CA applies to:
- an eligible licensee and
- an eligible credit reporting body.
The holder of an AC license is an eligible licensee
on 1 April 2020 or a later day provided that the licensee is a large ADI,
or is a body corporate of a kind prescribed by the regulations and is a credit
provider.[74]
The definition of large ADI is imported from
the Banking Act
1959. Essentially, the Minister may, by legislative instrument,
determine the kinds of ADIs that are large ADIs. The current legislative
instrument provides:
- a
small ADI has less than or equal to $10 billion on a three year average of
total resident assets
- a
medium ADI has between $10 billion and $100 billion on a three year average of
total resident assets and
- a
large ADI is any ADI with greater than or equal to $100 billion on a three year
average of total resident assets.[75]
Key issue—other credit providers
Some submitters to the Economics Committee expressed
concern that the Bill restricts the compulsory credit reporting scheme to the
major banks. For instance, Westpac has stated that it holds a firm belief that
it should apply to all credit providers.[76]
Westpac expressed its concern that whilst ‘the Government is open to including
other [credit providers] at a later date, there appears to be no mechanism to
monitor when other credit providers come on board and the speed at which that
occurs’.[77]
On the other hand, the Customer Owned Banking Association
(COBA) which is the industry association for Australia’s customer owned banking
institutions such as mutual banks, credit unions and building societies,
supported the Government’s decision to confine the measures in the Bill to
large ADIs, for the time being, as it ‘avoids imposing unnecessary costs on
smaller ADIs while creating a critical mass of CCR data to encourage all credit
providers to undertake the investment needed to participate’.[78]
Entities receiving credit information
There are two instances in which a credit reporting body
is an eligible credit reporting body (CRB) for a
licensee.
The first is if, on 2 November 2017, there was in
force an agreement between the credit reporting body and credit providers that
required the credit providers to protect credit reporting information that is
disclosed to them from misuse, interference and loss; and from unauthorised
access, modification or disclosure—as required by subsection 20Q(2) of the Privacy
Act.[79]
The second instance is where the conditions (if
any) prescribed by the regulations are met.[80]
Application of Part 3-2CA
New Part 3‑2CA of
the Consumer Credit Act applies in addition to the Privacy Act.
That is, nothing in Part IIIA of the Privacy Act which contains the
framework for the collection, disclosure and use of credit-related information,
is changed by this Bill.
Scrutiny of Bills Committee comments
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee expressed its concern that
‘the [2018] Bill appears to leave a number of relatively substantial elements
of the mandatory credit reporting scheme—which may have significant privacy
implications—to delegated legislation’.[81]
The Committee singled out the definitions of eligible licensee
and eligible credit reporting body, which as discussed above,
rely on elements to be prescribed in regulations. The Committee was concerned
that this approach could weaken the protections conferred by the Privacy Act,
in particular because:
a licensee that becomes an 'eligible licensee' after 1 July
2018 must make its initial bulk supply of mandatory credit information to a
credit reporting body that meets conditions prescribed by the
regulations—rather than to a reporting body with which the licensee has an
agreement under paragraph 20Q(2)(a) of the Privacy Act.[82]
Information to be supplied
Proposed
subsection 133CR(1) of the Consumer Credit Act requires an eligible licensee to supply mandatory credit
information to each CRB for the licensee.[83]
Under proposed section 133CP of the Consumer Credit Act, mandatory
credit information for eligible credit accounts[84]
held by natural persons is personal information for those accounts that is:
- identification
information about a natural person—being the individual’s full name;
any alias or previous name; the individual’s date of birth; the individual’s sex;
the individual’s current or last known address, and two previous addresses (if
any); the name of the individual’s current or last known employer; and the
individual’s driver’s licence number (if any)[85]
- consumer
credit liability information about a natural person is the name of the
consumer credit provider; whether the provider is a licensee; the type of
consumer credit; the day on which the consumer credit is entered into; the
terms or conditions of the consumer credit that relate to the repayment of the amount
of credit and that are prescribed by the regulations; the maximum amount of
credit available under the consumer credit; and the day on which the consumer
credit is terminated or otherwise ceases to be in force[86]
- repayment
history information—includes the day on which a monthly payment is due
and payable; and if the individual makes the monthly payment after the day on
which the payment is due and payable—the day on which the individual makes that
payment[87]
- default
information—is information in relation to payments that are at least 60
days overdue and where the provider has given a written notice to the
individual informing him, or her, of the overdue payment and requesting payment
of that amount; the provider is not prevented by a statute of limitations from
recovering the amount of the overdue payment; and the amount of the overdue
payment is equal to or more than $150; or a higher amount as is prescribed by
the regulations[88]
- payment
information—if a credit provider has disclosed default information about
an individual to a credit reporting body; and on a day after the default
information was disclosed, the amount of the overdue payment to which the
information relates is paid; then payment information about the
individual is a statement that the amount of the overdue payment has been paid
on that day[89]
- new
arrangement information—if a credit provider has disclosed default
information about an individual to a credit reporting body and because the
individual is so overdue: the terms or conditions of the original consumer
credit that relate to the repayment of the amount of credit are varied; or the
individual is provided with other consumer credit; then new arrangement
information about the individual is a statement that those terms or conditions
of the original consumer credit have been varied, or that the individual has
been provided with the new consumer credit.[90]
Timing for supply of information
First bulk supply
Under the Bill, an eligible licensee must supply
mandatory credit information for at least 50 per cent of all of the
eligible credit accounts held with the licensee (or with a member of a banking
group of which the licensee is the head company[91])
on the first 1 April on which the licensee is an eligible licensee.[92]
It will be up to the licensee to choose which eligible accounts make up the
50 per cent.
The general rule is that the first bulk supply of
mandatory credit information to each eligible CRB for the
licensee must occur before the end of the 90‑day period starting on the
first 1 April on which the licensee is an eligible licensee.[93]
This means that the first bulk supply of information must be completed by 29 June
2020.
There is an exception to this rule if the licensee
reasonably believes that the CRB is not complying with
section 20Q of the Privacy Act on 1 April. In that case, proposed
section 133CS of the Consumer Credit Act sets out the procedures to
be followed by the licensee as follows:
- Step
1: the licensee prepares a written notice setting out the licensee’s
reasons for its belief that the body is not complying with section 20Q of
the Privacy Act on that 1 April and stating that the body may try
to convince the licensee otherwise before the end of the 90‑day period
starting on that 1 April[94]
- Step
2: the licensee gives that notice to the credit reporting body, and a copy
to the Information Commissioner and ASIC, within seven days after that 1 April[95]
- Step
3: the licensee prepares a written notice (the final notice)
reiterating the reasons for its belief that the body is not complying with
section 20Q of the Privacy Act on the last day of that 90‑day
period[96]
and
- Step
4: the licensee gives the final notice to the body, and a copy to the
Information Commissioner and ASIC, within seven days after the last day of that
90‑day period.[97]
If, following steps 1 and 2, the licensee ceases to hold
the belief that the CRB is not complying with section 20Q of
the Privacy Act before the end of the 90-day period (called the cessation
day)[98]
the first bulk supply of mandatory credit information in respect of that CRB
for the licensee must occur before the end of the 14-day period starting on the
cessation day, or at the end of the 90 day period beginning on 1
April—whichever is later.[99]
Subsequent bulk supply
Under the Bill, an eligible licensee must supply
mandatory credit information for all those eligible credit accounts held with
the licensee (or with a member of a banking group of which the licensee is the
head company) that were not supplied in the first bulk supply.[100]
The general rule is that the mandatory credit information
is to be supplied before the end of the 90‑day period starting on the
second 1 April on which the licensee is an eligible licensee.[101]
The exception to the rule for the first bulk supply also operates for the
subsequent bulk supply.[102]
Reporting to the Minister
The Bill sets out requirements for
both licensees and eligible credit reporting bodies to give the Minister
audited statements (in the form prescribed by regulation) about the mandatory
comprehensive credit reporting regime following each of the initial bulk supply
and the subsequent bulk supply. A failure to comply with the reporting
requirement gives rise to a civil penalty[103] and is also an offence. The maximum criminal penalty is 100
penalty units for an individual and 500 penalty units for a body corporate.[104]
In its submission on the 2018 Bill,
the Australian Banking Association (ABA) questioned the necessity of providing
a statement of compliance to the Minister—given that it is ‘a regulatory impost
which would duplicate the role of the regulator, ASIC’. The ABA stated its view
that ‘only the one process of audited compliance reporting should be made to
ASIC. These statements can then be provided by ASIC to the Treasurer’.[105] The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill does not provide a
rationale for the requirement.
How the supply is made
Under proposed
section 133CQ of the Consumer Credit Act information must
be supplied in accordance with the supply requirements which will
be satisfied if the supply complies with:
- the
registered CR code—currently the Privacy (Credit
Reporting) Code 2014 (Version 2)
- an
ASIC determination setting out the information that must be included in the
supply
- a
technical standard that has been approved by ASIC in writing in relation to the
supply of one or more kinds of information.[106]
Ongoing
requirement to supply
The
ongoing supply requirement in proposed section 133CU of the Consumer
Credit Act complements those provisions. The section applies to a
licensee which has supplied a CRB with mandatory credit
information. If on a later day (called the trigger day) the licensee
(or a member of a banking group of which the licensee is the head company),
would reasonably be expected to have become aware that any of the events that
are set out in the table in proposed subsection 133CU(1) have
happened then the licensee must supply the CRB with the
corresponding updated information referred to in the table. Those events are:
- corrections
to the information supplied to a credit reporting body which are necessary to
keep the information accurate, up-to-date, complete, relevant and not
misleading [107]
- a
payment has been made where default information has previously been supplied to
the credit reporting body[108]
- new
accounts opened after the two initial bulk supplies of information have been
supplied to credit reporting bodies[109]
- default
information comes into existence for an eligible account[110]
- an
event prescribed by the regulations, related to an eligible account or account
holder.[111]
The general rule is that the supply of updated information
must take must take place before the end of the 45‑day period starting
on the trigger day.[112]
An exception to the rule operates in circumstances where the credit provider reasonably
believes that the CRB is not complying with section 20Q of the Privacy Act,
in an equivalent manner to that for the first and subsequent bulk supplies.[113]
Offences
The Bill
creates a number of new offences, including:
- a
person commits an offence if the person is subject to a requirement to supply
mandatory credit information for the first bulk supply (under proposed
subsection 133CR(1)) or the subsequent bulk supply (under proposed
subsection 133CR(3)) and the person engages in conduct which contravenes
the requirement[114]
- a
person commits an offence if the person is subject to an ongoing requirement to
supply mandatory credit information (under proposed subsection 133CU(1))
and the person engages in conduct which contravenes the requirement[115]
and
- a
person commits an offence if the person must give a notice if a CRB
later complies with information security requirements (under proposed sections
133CT or 133CW) and the person engages in conduct which contravenes the
requirement.[116]
In each case the maximum penalty is 100 penalty units for
an individual, being equivalent to $21,000 and 500 penalty units ($105,000) for
a body corporate.[117]
Evidential burden
Item 3 of Schedule 1 of the Bill inserts the
definition of the term evidential burden into subsection 5(1) of
the Consumer Credit Act being, in relation to a matter, the burden of
adducing or pointing to evidence that suggests a reasonable possibility that
the matter exists or does not exist. The defendant bears the evidential burden
in respect of elements of some of the offences in the Bill.
In comments on the 2018 Bill, the Queensland Law Society
(QLS) was critical of the definition of evidential burden on the
grounds that it ‘adopts a standard of proof contrary to that developed by the
law over time’ and that its drafting will ‘create confusion rather than
clarification’. QLS recommended that the definition should be changed to delete
the reference to ‘a reasonable possibility’ and insert ‘in the case of a civil
proceeding, on the balance of probabilities and, in the case of criminal
proceedings, beyond a reasonable doubt’.[118]
On‑disclosing
credit information
Proposed
section 133CZA of the Consumer Credit Act
applies to a credit reporting body in relation to protected
information being:
- any
information that is supplied to the credit reporting body under Division 2
of new Part 3-2CA and
- any CRB derived information that is derived from information that has
been supplied under Division 2 of new Part 3-2CA.[119]
Regulations may prescribe:
- the
conditions in which a credit reporting body must disclose, or must not
disclose, protected information to a credit provider
- the
kind or kinds of protected information which must be, or must not be, disclosed
and
- the
time within which any disclosure must take place.[120]
Civil penalties apply to any breach of the requirements
contained in the regulations relating to protected information.[121]
In addition, a person commits an offence if the person engages in conduct which
contravenes a requirement set out in proposed section 133CZA
for the disclosure of protected information.[122]
In that case, the maximum criminal penalty is 100 penalty units for an
individual and 500 penalty units for a body corporate.[123]
ASIC’s role
ASIC may, by writing, appoint one or more suitably
qualified persons or the members of one or more classes of suitably qualified
persons as auditors.[124]
In addition, the Bill empowers ASIC to give a written
notice to a Part 3-2CA body to provide a statement containing
specified information about its compliance with that Part.[125]
For the purposes of this obligation a Part 3‑2CA body
is a person that is or has been an eligible licensee or an eligible credit
reporting body for a licensee.[126]
The written notice may be given at any time.[127]
ASIC may also require, in writing, the body to obtain an
audit report prepared by a suitably qualified person before the statement is
given to ASIC.[128]
A failure to comply with such a notice in the time
stipulated in the notice gives rise to a civil penalty[129]
and a criminal offence.[130]
Further,
the Bill imposes obligations for a Part 3-2CA body to give ASIC certain information which is specified
in the Regulations;[131]
and to provide ASIC with assistance if it is reasonably requested.[132]
Review of the Part 3-2CA
The Bill requires the Minister to instigate an independent
review of the operation of new Part 3‑2CA. The review is to be completed
and a written report given to the Minister before 1 October 2023. The
Minister is to table copies of the report in each House of the Parliament
within 15 sitting days of that House after the report is given to the Minister.[133]
Schedule 1—other provisions
Item 11 of Schedule 1 of the Bill amends the Privacy
Act by inserting proposed subsection 20Q(3) which requires a credit
reporting body which holds credit reporting information to store that
information in Australia or an external Territory or in accordance with any
security requirements prescribed by the regulations for storing the information
outside of Australia and the external Territories, and in accordance with any
security requirements prescribed by the regulations.
Key issues
and provisions: Schedule 2—financial hardship amendments
The proposed amendments in Schedule 2 will have the effect
of permitting credit reporting bodies to collect, use, disclose and retain
financial hardship information. This is not currently permitted.
The amendments will also permit credit providers to
disclose financial hardship information to credit reporting bodies.
The proposed changes include certain safeguards for the
financial hardship information scheme, such as a one year retention period,
security requirements and an independent review of the system.
Financial
hardship amendments to the Privacy Act
Items 1–13 of Schedule 2, Part 1, amend the Privacy
Act to introduce a scheme for dealing with financial hardship information.
Relevant terms
Item 4 introduces the definitions of financial
hardship arrangement and financial hardship information.
Proposed subsections 6QA(1)–(3) of the Privacy
Act provide that a financial hardship arrangement is
an arrangement where a credit provider provides consumer credit to person and:
- the
National Credit Code applies to the provision of the credit
- the
person is or will be unable to meet their credit obligations
- as
a result of the inability, an arrangement is made which is either a permanent
variation to the terms of the consumer credit or a temporary relief from or
deferral of the individual’s obligations.
It does not matter whether the person or credit provider
initiated the arrangement.[134]
The arrangement may be ‘any kind of agreement, arrangement
or understanding, whether formal or informal, whether express or implied and
whether or not enforceable, or intended to be enforceable, by legal proceedings’.[135]
Item 5 inserts proposed subsections 6V(1A) and
(1B) into the Privacy Act to provide that obligations to make
repayments and related repayment history information is to be determined in
light of obligations as affected by any financial hardship arrangement
that is in place. In particular, if, under a financial hardship arrangement
a person is not required to make a monthly payment for a month, then a monthly
payment is taken to have been due and payable on the day on which it would have
been due and payable apart from the arrangement and the person is taken to have
met the obligation to make the monthly payment.
Proposed subsections 6QA(4) and (5) provide that financial
hardship information is information used in determining repayment
history information under financial hardship arrangements. In particular, proposed
subsection 6QA(4) sets out the following information as financial
hardship information:
- where
an arrangement is made under proposed subsection 6QA(1) for a permanent
variation to the credit terms, information relating only to the first monthly
payment affected by the arrangement, that indicates that it is the first
monthly payment affected by the arrangement, and
- where
an arrangement is made under proposed subsection 6QA(1) for temporary
relief or deferral of obligations, information relating to each monthly payment
affected by the arrangement, that indicates that the monthly payment was
affected by the arrangement.
Safeguards
Proposed subsection 6QA(5) of the Privacy Act
provides that the above discussed information relating to a temporary relief or
deferral of obligations does not fall within the scope of financial hardship
information if the person met the obligation to make the monthly payment
under the arrangement and the amount paid was equal to, or greater than, the
amount that would have been due without the arrangement being in place.
Item 6 amends paragraph 20C(4)(e) to add financial
hardship information as a class of information that is able to be collected
by credit reporting bodies in the same circumstances and under the same
conditions as already exist for repayment history information in section 20C of
the Privacy Act. Similarly, item 7 adds financial hardship
information alongside repayment history information as a source of credit
reporting information that is protected through restrictions being imposed on
the disclosure of the resulting credit reporting information under existing
subsection 20E(4).
Item 8 further amends section 20E by adding proposed
subsection 20E(7) to clarify that the existing exemptions allowing
permitted disclosures of credit reporting information under subsection 20E(3) (for
instance, disclosure permitted for credit reporting, dispute resolution and law
enforcement purposes) do not apply to information from credit reporting bodies
containing a credit score where the credit information from which the credit
score is derived includes financial hardship information.
Item 9 adds financial hardship information to
the list of credit information in paragraph 20G(2)(c) of the Privacy Act
that credit reporting bodies are not permitted to use for purposes of direct
marketing.
Item 10 adds an item to the table in section 20W to
set the retention period for financial hardship information as one year,
starting on the day on which the monthly payment to which the information
relates is due and payable.
Existing section 21D of the Privacy Act provides
that a credit provider must not disclose credit information about an individual
to a credit reporting body unless certain conditions are met. For example, the
information to be disclosed must not relate to something that occurred before a
person turned 18, the credit must have been provided or applied for in
Australia and the individual must have been given notice of 14 days if default
information is to be disclosed. Additionally, if the information is repayment
history information:
- the
credit provider must be a licensee or prescribed by the regulations
- the
consumer credit to which the information relates must be consumer credit in
relation to which the provider also discloses, or a credit provider has
previously disclosed, consumer credit liability information about the
individual to the credit reporting body; and
- the
provider must comply with any disclosure requirements that are prescribed by
the regulations.[136]
Item 11 adds financial hardship information to
‘repayment history information’ as information to which the above conditions
must apply before a disclosure is permitted under section 21D.
Item 12 inserts proposed section 21EA to
provide that financial hardship information must be disclosed to a
credit reporting body if repayment history information is disclosed about an
individual in relation to a monthly payment under section 21D and financial
hardship information related to that monthly payment exists. There is a
civil penalty of 500 penalty units if a credit provider fails to disclose the
relevant financial hardship information under this section.
Item 13 adds financial hardship information to
‘repayment history information’ as information to which existing subsection
21G(4) applies. This has the effect of excluding credit eligibility information
derived from repayment history information or financial hardship information from
the information that may be otherwise disclosed in certain circumstances under
section 21G. Note that existing subsection 21G(5) provides that disclosure of
such information may still be made if the disclosure is:
- to
another credit provider who is a licensee
- a
permitted credit provider disclosure within the meaning of section 21L (to an
Australian mortgage insurer for a relevant purpose)
- to
a related body corporate of the credit provider, for processing a credit
application or managing credit, for recognised dispute resolution, or
authorised under law, or
- related
to a serious credit infringement and made to an enforcement body.
Item 14 provides that the above amendments to the Privacy
Act apply to arrangements made on or after their commencement, regardless
of when the consumer credit was applied for.
Financial
hardship amendments to the Consumer Credit Act
Items 15–21 of Schedule 2 introduce related
amendments to the Consumer Credit Act.
These amendments introduce a definition of financial
hardship information as having the same meaning as in the Privacy
Act,[137]
and ensure that financial hardship information is dealt with appropriately in
the Consumer Credit Act.
Item 16 adds financial hardship information
to the list of information that is considered to be mandatory credit
information in proposed subsection 133CP(1).[138]
Item 17 inserts proposed subsection 133CP(3)
into the Consumer Credit Act to clarify that mandatory credit
information does not include financial hardship information that
comes into existence before 1 April 2021 or more than three months before the
first 1 April on which the credit provider (or head company) is an eligible
licensee.
Item 18 inserts a proposed table item 4 into
the table at proposed subsection 133CU(1), which sets out information to
be supplied by a licensee to a credit reporting body on an ongoing basis, where
certain events occur.[139]
Proposed table item 4 requires financial hardship information to
be supplied where it comes into existence on or after the later of 1 April 2021
or the day after the first day mandatory credit information for the account is
supplied.
Item 19 inserts proposed subclause 67(1A) into
the National Credit Code to ensure that a provision of a continuing credit
contract has no effect where a provider seeks to rely on the provision to
refuse further credit or reduce a credit limit merely because of financial
hardship information about the debtor.
Schedule 2—other
provisions
Items 24 to 33 introduce other amendments to the Privacy
Act relating to a new category of non-participating credit provider.
Item 24 of Schedule 2 inserts a definition of non-participating
credit provider into subsection 6(1), being a provider that has not
and is not likely to disclose credit reporting information or credit
eligibility information about an individual to a credit reporting body or
another credit provider, and has not collected such information from a credit
reporting body or another credit provider. Items 26, 30 and 31 add
exemptions for such non-participating credit providers from relevant regulatory
requirements.
Item 34 of Schedule 2 inserts proposed section
25B to require the Minister to cause an independent review to be conducted
of the operation of the credit reporting system set out in Part IIIA of the Privacy
Act. The review must be completed and presented to the Minister before 1 October
2023, and must be tabled in each House of Parliament within 15 sitting days.
Concluding comments
The most compelling problem highlighted by the submitters
to the Economics Committee regarding the 2018 Bill was that of whether and/or
how to comply with reporting obligations whilst at the same time preserving the
privacy of those debtors who have entered into hardship arrangements. The
amendments in Schedule 2 represent a response to these concerns following the review
conducted by the Attorney-General’s Department and the subsequent consultation
process carried out by Treasury.[140]