Damon Murchison asserts that clients are more empowered than ever. The claim deserves scrutiny.
Empowerment means the capacity to make informed decisions in one’s own best interest. By that standard, the article offers no evidence — only a catalogue of expanded firm capabilities. More services available to clients is not the same as clients better positioned to evaluate and choose among them.
Access is not agency. The consolidation argument cuts directly against the premise. Fewer firms with greater scale means reduced competitive pressure, higher switching costs and diminished client leverage. These are structural conditions that weaken a client’s hand, not strengthen it.
The invocation of financial literacy compounds the problem. Positioning client education as a component of empowerment — rather than investing in binding dispute resolution, structural disclosure reform and enforceable conduct standards — is the industry’s preferred substitute for accountability. It is not empowerment.
The industry is larger, better capitalized and more technologically capable. Whether clients can make informed decisions in their own interest — with the information, tools and structural protections to do so — is a different question entirely, and one this article does not answer.