Universities worried by FASEA’s reforms

FASEA financial planning education professionalisation deakin

image
image
expand image

The Financial Advisers Standards and Ethics Authority (FASEA) has universities on standby as it takes its time in rolling out the proposed reforms, causing some distress among course coordinators.

While most educational institutions tend to stay 12 months ahead of the industry, they’ve been frustrated by the lack of information provided by the regulatory body, according to associate professor at Deakin University, Adrian Raftery.

Raftery told Money Management that he was particularly worried about what FASEA’s changes will do to their graduate diploma given the lack of technical financial planning subjects incorporated into the postgraduate qualification.

He said normally, graduate diplomas are comprised of eight subjects, two of which must be in line with the Tax Practitioners Board’s requirements of income tax and commercial law, and now three which must be FASEA’s proposed ethics, behavioural finance and financial services regulations courses.

Raftery added that any financial planning diploma requires some introduction to financial planning and a capstone course, which brings the total number of courses to seven, leaving one course left to fit in superannuation, retirement planning, estate planning, insurance, investments and portfolio courses.

“We’re trying to basically fit five subjects into one, which really isn’t very ideal at all, and there’s very few technical financial planning subjects incorporated into those eight subjects,” he said.

Raftery said he was keen to get the ball rolling and up the standards of advisers coming out of the woodwork, but a stall in enrolments as potential advisers await FASEA’s announcement might see an influx of students in later years, which has him worried it will put a massive strain on university resources. 

“I’m fearful of courses being run by casuals who may have a masters qualification or may not, but they’re not full time academics,” he said. “So, staffing resources of appropriately qualified academics is going to be an issue in 2023.”

Despite reservations, Raftery said the university already has gears in motion for what’s to come from FASEA and awaits an announcement eagerly.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

This verdict highlights something deeply wrong and rotten at the heart of the FSCP. We are witnessing a heavy-handed, op...

2 days 23 hours ago

Interesting. Would be good to know the details of the StrategyOne deal....

1 week ago

It’s astonishing to see the FAAA now pushing for more advisers by courting "career changers" and international recruits,...

3 weeks 5 days ago

Insignia Financial has made four appointments, including three who have joined from TAL, to lead strategy and innovation in its retirement solutions for the MLC brand....

3 weeks ago

A former Brisbane financial adviser has been charged with 26 counts of dishonest conduct regarding a failure to disclose he would receive substantial commission payments ...

6 days 3 hours ago

Pinnacle Investment Management has announced it will acquire strategic interests in two international fund managers for $142 million....

5 days 6 hours ago