Double the compo: Up to $2 million for business banking victims under Labor

The federal opposition wants to double the compensation cap available to small businesses with banking or financial services grievances in the wake of the banking royal commission.
Shadow Minister for Financial Services Clare OโNeil says small-business victims of banking misconduct would be eligible for up to $2 million in compensation if Labor is elected, up from $1 million under the coalition.
Labor wants banks to foot the bill and will even make them pay for the misdeeds of separate and now-insolvent financial service providers to a yet-to-be-decided cap.
It would also do away with the $30 million in taxpayer funds being added to the compensation pool by the coalition.
โThe horror stories that came out of the Royal Commission have shocked every Australian,โ OโNeil said in a statement circulated on Friday.
โItโs clear that victims need a stronger response to ensure that their complaints are properly assessed and that compensation comes close to matching the disgraceful conduct of the big banks.โ
The new Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) would be responsible for administering Laborโs bulked-up compo scheme.
The complaints body is preparing to field compensation requests related to banking and financial services misconduct dating back to 2008 from July 1 this year.
Labor has matched the governmentโs 11-year back-dating commitment but has extended the timeframe in which complaints can be made to two years instead of one.
The plan will also provide businesses with a second chance to argue their complaintsย โ an attempt to make sure those in harder-to-reach areas can hear about the compo scheme and participate.
An โindependent boardโ consisting of โindependent experts in the fieldโ, but funded by a levy on AFCA members (the banks), will oversee all decisions made by Laborโs compo scheme.
This will include deciding on how much banks will have to pay for the behaviour of now-insolvent financial service providers when โlegitimate claimsโ are made.
โUnder Labor it will be industry, not the taxpayer, that foots the bill,โ the opposition said in its media statement announcing the plan.
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