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Home»Business & Economy»ASIC finds companies are falling short on misconduct crackdown
Business & Economy

ASIC finds companies are falling short on misconduct crackdown

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auDecember 3, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
ASIC finds companies are falling short on misconduct crackdown
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Australian businesses are falling short on cracking down on misconduct, the corporate regulator has revealed, with one in three lacking a dedicated whistleblower webpage and one in five having no dedicated hotline.

The figures are from a survey, commissioned by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), which canvassed 134 companies that reported receiving 8095 disclosures between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025.

ASIC commissioner Alan Kirkland says companies should benchmark themselves against the findings from the corporate regulator’s report.

ASIC commissioner Alan Kirkland says companies should benchmark themselves against the findings from the corporate regulator’s report.Credit: Oscar Colman

Whistleblowers have played a crucial role in identifying and exposing misconduct, including scandals that led to the banking royal commission, but they continue to face risks. Former debt collection officer Richard Boyle was spared jail time this year after being prosecuted for exposing unethical debt-collection practices.

In February, an independent-led bill to enhance protections for whistleblowers, including a new Whistleblower Protection Authority, was introduced to parliament but was knocked back in the Senate in favour of further consultation by the government.

The latest questionnaire by ASIC found 69 per cent of disclosures were made through a dedicated whistleblower reporting webpage or hotline and half were made anonymously.

The corporate regulator said good practices, investigation time frames and outcomes of whistleblower programs varied across Australian businesses, but that those with stronger practices generally had higher disclosure rates.

Nearly one-quarter of surveyed companies reported receiving no disclosures, while the median disclosure rate – the number of disclosures for every 100 employees – was 0.22, which ASIC said “appear at the lower end”.

However, the report noted this could be due to reasons ranging from lack of trust in internal processes and weaker feelings of safety to raise concerns, a positive workplace environment in which issues are resolved early outside of formal whistleblowing channels, or because of a company’s size, structure, or the nature of its operations.

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