The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity
Singapore hasrecently amended its Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act in response to calls for tougher action against unscrupulous traders. The revisions were aimed at strengthening the government’s ability to deter and punish errant traders, witha focus on deterrence. To this end, the government...
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sg-smu-ink.sol_research-45012019-01-03T07:23:23Z The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity LOO, Wee Ling ONG, Ee-Ing Singapore hasrecently amended its Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act in response to calls for tougher action against unscrupulous traders. The revisions were aimed at strengthening the government’s ability to deter and punish errant traders, witha focus on deterrence. To this end, the government introduced new investigatory powers, enhanced court powers and added one substantive consumer remedy. Despite this, the authors argue that Singapore’s consumer protection regime remains inadequate because: unfair practices have yet to attract criminalsanctions; no guidelines were issued to provide transparency and clarity on how the broad investigatory powers and harsher court powers are to be implemented; no measures to encourage reform were introduced; and consumer remedies remain insufficient. In this article, the revisions are discussed with a comparison tothe Hong Kong and Australian regimes. Suggestions for further reform are then made for the purpose of achieving a more robust and comprehensive consumer protection regime. 2017-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2543 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4501/viewcontent/2016_ConsumerProtection_MissedOpp_2017.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Consumer protection Unfair practice Comparative law Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act Hong Kong Trade Descriptions Ordinance Australian Competition and Consumer Act Australian Consumer Law Consumer remedies Voluntary compliance Deterrence Reform Guidelines Injunctions Investigatory powers Criminal sanctions Civil pecuniary penalties Asian Studies Consumer Protection Law International Trade Law |
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Consumer protection Unfair practice Comparative law Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act Hong Kong Trade Descriptions Ordinance Australian Competition and Consumer Act Australian Consumer Law Consumer remedies Voluntary compliance Deterrence Reform Guidelines Injunctions Investigatory powers Criminal sanctions Civil pecuniary penalties Asian Studies Consumer Protection Law International Trade Law |
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Consumer protection Unfair practice Comparative law Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act Hong Kong Trade Descriptions Ordinance Australian Competition and Consumer Act Australian Consumer Law Consumer remedies Voluntary compliance Deterrence Reform Guidelines Injunctions Investigatory powers Criminal sanctions Civil pecuniary penalties Asian Studies Consumer Protection Law International Trade Law LOO, Wee Ling ONG, Ee-Ing The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity |
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Singapore hasrecently amended its Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act in response to calls for tougher action against unscrupulous traders. The revisions were aimed at strengthening the government’s ability to deter and punish errant traders, witha focus on deterrence. To this end, the government introduced new investigatory powers, enhanced court powers and added one substantive consumer remedy. Despite this, the authors argue that Singapore’s consumer protection regime remains inadequate because: unfair practices have yet to attract criminalsanctions; no guidelines were issued to provide transparency and clarity on how the broad investigatory powers and harsher court powers are to be implemented; no measures to encourage reform were introduced; and consumer remedies remain insufficient. In this article, the revisions are discussed with a comparison tothe Hong Kong and Australian regimes. Suggestions for further reform are then made for the purpose of achieving a more robust and comprehensive consumer protection regime. |
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text |
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LOO, Wee Ling ONG, Ee-Ing |
author_facet |
LOO, Wee Ling ONG, Ee-Ing |
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LOO, Wee Ling |
title |
The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity |
title_short |
The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity |
title_full |
The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity |
title_fullStr |
The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity |
title_full_unstemmed |
The 2016 amendments to Singapore’s Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act: A missed opportunity |
title_sort |
2016 amendments to singapore’s consumer protection (fair trading) act: a missed opportunity |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2017 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/2543 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/4501/viewcontent/2016_ConsumerProtection_MissedOpp_2017.pdf |
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