September 17, 2024

Am I The Only One –How regulators can use complaints data to help consumers, businesses and themselves

Many regulators in Australia have a wealth of insights in the data they hold from consumer complaints, but often the information is not easily accessible or even made public. This report explores:

  • The current state of consumer complaints data publication by Australian regulators
  • Benefits of public reporting of complaints
  • Best practices for publishing consumer complaints data
  • Assessments and recommendations for Australian regulators
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Key findings

Complaints data is valuable

There’s a significant opportunity for regulators to use the valuable consumer data they hold, making it more accessible and actionable for all stakeholders. This data:

Current state of data publication

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Most Australian Consumer Law regulators underutilise data from consumer complaints

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NSW leads with a monthly complaints register, naming companies that receive the most complaints each month

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QLD also publishes issue-specific data in a CSV file

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Most regulators only report basic complaint numbers in annual reports

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Ombuds in Australia tend to lead in publishing complaints data, while ACL regulators publish limited information

Path for Improvement

All regulators can improve how they collect, use and public data about consumer complaints.

The research has identified best practices that can guide regulators towards more effective data publication.

Data is most useful when:

Recommendations

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ACL regulators should improve their data publication practices to align with best practices identified in the report
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Regulators should consider implementing interactive dashboards, searchable databases, league tables, and regular trend reports
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Data should be published comprehensively, including business names, industries, products/services, and issues
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Publication should occur frequently (quarterly or monthly) and consistently to allow for comparisons over time
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Data should be highly accessible and usable by various audiences

Where to from here?

CPRC welcomes the opportunity to work further on this issue with government, regulators, policy makers, academia and the community sector.

If you are in one the above groups and would like a one-on-one briefing for your organisation, contact our team today.  

Links

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