Corporate Law Economic Reform Program Act 2004
Corporate Law Economic Reform Program Act 2004, commonly called CLERP 9, modified the Corporations Act 2001 which governs corporate law in Australia. It was enacted in July 2004.
The changes were based on the reform proposals contained in the CLERP 9 discussion paper, Corporation disclosure - strengthening the financial reporting framework, which was released by the Australian government in September 2002. The 2004 amendments also enacted some reforms flowing from the recommendations in the Report of the HIH Insurance Royal Commission released in April 2003.
The important reforms to the Corporations Act included:
- changes to continuous disclosure offence provisions, including giving ASIC the power to issue infringement notices.
- changes to financial reporting, including requiring the CEO and CFO sign-off to the board, and Management Discussion & Analysis disclosure in the Annual Report.
- the introduction of a non-binding vote on remuneration reports and expanded executive remuneration
- new provisions pertaining to auditor independence, and amendments affecting the audit function and audit oversight.
- licensing obligations for financial services licensees to manage conflicts of interest and address analysts independence.
- amendments to the fundraising provisions in Chapters 6D and 7 of the Corporations Act.