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News > World

Australia Proposes Reforms to Boost Anti-Money Laundering Drive

  • Australian dollar notes and coins can be seen in a cash register at a store in Sydney, Australia, February 11, 2016.

    Australian dollar notes and coins can be seen in a cash register at a store in Sydney, Australia, February 11, 2016. | Photo: Reuters

Published 30 April 2016
Opinion

Global agencies found last year found significant gaps in Australia's anti-money laundering framework.
 


Australia on Friday proposed changes to simplify its anti money-laundering and terrorism financing laws, notably extending the regulations to include intermediaries and professions currently not required to report suspicious transactions.

The 84 recommendations in a statutory review published on Friday include extending the current anti-money laundering rules to encompass accountants, lawyers, real estate agents and dealers in high-value objects such as jewelry.

The global anti-money laundering body Financial Action Task Force (FATF) last year found significant gaps in Australia's anti-money laundering framework, particularly in the regulation of professional service providers such as lawyers and accountants, who are not covered by existing rules.

Friday's recommendations would help bolster Australia's compliance and enforcement and allow it to simplify its anti-money laundering/counter terrorism financing regulations to minimize red tape and duplication.

The reforms will be progressed in two stages to prevent "regulatory fatigue," the Justice Minister Michael Keenan said in the report.
 

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