Image: Screenshot from news.com.au video
By Denis Hay
Big Four banks in Australia profit as citizens struggle – learn how dollar sovereignty could shift the balance of power.
Australia’s Big Four banks – Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, NAB, and ANZ – are raking in billions while everyday Australians face soaring housing costs, growing debt, and job insecurity.
These banks dominate nearly every financial transaction, from home loans to superannuation, yet their profits surge even as Australians suffer under the weight of rising interest rates and economic inequality. This profit-first model isn’t just unfair – it’s a systemic problem that amplifies financial hardship and limits public investment in the services we all need.
But there is another way. By reclaiming Australia’s dollar sovereignty, we can challenge the power of private banks and build a public banking system that works for the common good, not corporate shareholders.
The Big Four banks in Australia – Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, NAB, and ANZ – control over 80% of the national banking sector. Their reach is vast: from home loans and savings accounts to superannuation funds and business financing.
This concentration of financial power allows them to shape regulation and policy to suit their bottom line – not the public good.
Because of their size, profits, and political reach, the Big Four are uniquely positioned to influence banking laws and financial regulation in ways that benefit themselves. They lobby intensively, make large donations to both major political parties, and maintain a revolving door between their executive ranks and government roles. This often results in regulatory capture – where watchdogs go soft on enforcement – and watered-down reforms that preserve the status quo. As a result, legislation is skewed toward protecting private profits over protecting people.
While Australians endure a cost-of-living crisis, the Big Four banks are thriving. In FY2023 alone, their combined profits exceeded $30 billion. These profits aren’t reinvested into communities – they’re distributed to shareholders, many of whom are overseas investors.
The Australian banking system is designed to reward profit over people. It’s not broken – it’s working exactly as intended.
The lack of real reform has deepened public disillusionment.
As the Big Four banks amass wealth, Australians are told there’s not enough public money to fund vital services.
This belief is rooted in a dangerous myth: that government must rely on taxes or private borrowing to fund public goods.
Australia issues its own sovereign currency. Like the UK, Japan, and the US, it cannot “run out” of money. Yet governments behave as though they’re financially constrained – allowing private banks to dominate.
This false narrative justifies underfunding public health, housing, and education while banks enjoy generous regulatory leeway.
Australia’s monetary sovereignty means it doesn’t need to borrow from the Big Four banks or issue bonds to pay for public services. The government, as a currency issuer, can fund what’s needed—while using regulation to manage inflation and demand.
The Big Four banks in Australia will not voluntarily give up power. Reform must be systemic.
These reforms won’t happen without public pressure – and public understanding of how Australia’s monetary system truly works.
Do you think Australia needs a public bank to put people before profit? What would financial fairness look like to you?
Leave your thoughts below – your perspective matters.
Q1: Who are the Big Four banks in Australia?
Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, ANZ, and NAB dominate banking services across Australia. They control most mortgage lending, deposits, and financial markets.
Q2: How do banks profit while Australians suffer?
They increase interest rates, charge fees, and promote property speculation – generating billions while households struggle with cost-of-living pressures.
Q3: What is monetary sovereignty in Australia?
It means Australia can issue its own currency to fund public needs without borrowing from private banks. The government faces no financial constraint – only real resource limits like labour or materials.
Q4: Can Australia afford a public bank?
Yes. With monetary sovereignty, the government can create a public bank using public money – not taxes or private debt – investing directly in people’s needs.
Q5: Why hasn’t the government implemented banking reform?
The banking sector wields enormous political influence. Through donations, lobbying, and media influence, it resists regulation that would prioritise people over profit.
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Australian Banking Association – Key Facts
Banking Royal Commission Final Report (gov.au)
This article was originally published on Social Justice Australia
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