kazukirai Wrote:However, I was thinking more along the lines of education from a neutral party (i.e. governmental/stat board) as many forummers have suggested regulation/enforcement which would come from such a party.
I do not know if there are any truly neutral parties with both the interest and the resources to educate the public.
The government is not a neutral party. It is riven by conflicts of interest.
On one hand it would like to develop a more sophisticated financial market in order to attract more foreign investors, who then attract more financial institutions who create jobs and pay taxes, who then attract more investors and so on.
This means that structured products like Minibonds are implicitly encouraged as they are not the usual "boring" stocks, bonds, cash and property that we all know. New products = innovation = good. The more fancy the products, the more sophisticated the financial system, and therefore the more successful the government can claim to be.
On the other hand it would not like retirees to lose all their savings to unscrupulous salespeople peddling unsuitable products. Destitute retirees become the government's problem. Their hospital bills are high, and their existence is proof that the government has failed the working class. So they are both expensive and embarrassing to care for.
The simplest way to sidestep this issue is to ban all structured products i.e. what you see is what you get. This will protect most retirees as only the traditional and fairly well understood stocks, bonds, cash and property will be available. The fewer retirees get hurt, the less bad press and fewer medical bills the government gets, and the more successful the government can claim to be.
These opposing standpoints are modified by some important factors:
1. There are only 3 large local banks, each with about 1/3 share of the banking system.
The more prosperous the banks, the less likely the government will have to help them in a crisis. But the most profitable products are the most sophisticated and most opaque products which defy easy analysis. Restricting sales of structured products will impact the banks' profitability, and increase the likelihood the government will need to intervene in a crisis.
2. A precedent has been set via the CPF Investment Scheme
The government first allowed people to invest their CPF money many years ago. It was a huge disaster for the citizenry as most people lost money. But it was a huge success for the unit trust industry as it made a very big pool of money available for them to tap.
The government has since progressively narrowed the scope of direct investment to only 35% in stocks, but has retained the full 100% eligibility for unit trusts, apart from the first $20k which cannot be invested.
This discrimination has at least 2 possible interpretations:
a. the government decided that professionals would probably do a better job than CPF members; and
b. the government wanted to keep the unit trust industry fed (fat?) with CPF money
This policy established a precedent where the financial industry was given priority i.e. they could invest 100% of members' money while members themselves could not do so.
3. Education is hard work
No government body will want to take on this unenviable task, especially when facing the vested interests of the banks and insurers. It is high cost, generates no revenues, and turns powerful interests into deadly enemies.
Unless someone at the very top decides that something needs to be done, the victims will likely be viewed as collateral damage along the path of Singapore's evolution towards a "sound and progressive financial centre" (quote taken from MAS website).
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That said, I think the best effort the government has made to educate the public so far comes from the CPF Board. Their IM$avvy portal is a good attempt in theory, but unfortunately in practice it is still stuffed with promotional material from the banks and unit trust managers and financial product distributors. They also left the Doctor $avvy Q&A section to be answered by the industry. You can guess what kind of answers they give to questions like "Is it a good idea to buy life insurance on our children?"
As usual, YMMV.