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New standards tipped to downplay traditional educators

Regulation

The federal government’s education plans for financial advisers and licensed accountants are becoming clearer, and will encompass downplaying the traditional role of vocational educators and professional associations, according to a former financial planning teacher.

By Aleks Vickovich 10 minute read

In a statement, Wealthdigital technical manager Rob Lavery – a former financial planning teacher at North Sydney TAFE and adviser trainer at ANZ – said FASEA’s approach is becoming less muddy, with some central themes emerging.

“It is evident that FASEA does not see the way industry regulation currently works as the basis for its new approach,” Mr Lavery said.

“FASEA’s consultation paper on CPD does not look to build on the specialist areas model used in ASIC’s RG146. Instead, four key areas are identified with a heavy focus on ethics and regulatory compliance.”

The government body’s “fresh approach” has also been unique, Mr Lavery said, in the way it handles the traditional role of adviser member associations and the vocational education providers.

“FASEA’s paper all but ruled out the participation of education providers in the vocational sector,” he said.

“This stands in contrast to the prominent role the vocational sector has played in providing qualifications to financial advisers up until now.

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“Professional bodies’ current role in creating structure around CPD, as well as assessing CPD content and providing it with accreditation, was not reflected in FASEA’s consultation paper.”

Mr Lavery said that while FASEA has not ruled out the ability for professional associations to become official code monitoring bodies, it has raised issues with potential conflict management and resources.

FASEA recently released proposed minimum CPD requirements for advisers, which will see licensed accountants forced to dedicate 50 hours at minimum to further training if they intend to remain in the AFSL environment.

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Aleks Vickovich

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