A report on Tuesday suggested the league would remove COLA by the start of the 2017 season, replacing it with rent subsidies for the two clubs based in Sydney.
The Fairfax Media story added that Greater Western Sydney would retain salary cap concessions in 2017 under new equalisation measures to be announced in June.
Malthouse, a long-term critic of COLA and the "two-tiered" system he feels it has created, wanted action now.
"2017? What's wrong with 2016 or 2015?" he asked, before spending the better part of four minutes offering his take on the issue.
"The quicker we straighten it out ... so there's no spikes in someone else's salary cap for particular reasons or because you live here or whatever you do, the better.
"I can spend another hour on this."
Malthouse, who started his playing career at St Kilda and coaching career at Footscray, detailed the fears he held for Melbourne's smaller and poorer clubs.
"I take my Carlton hat off and put on a football person's hat ... what do they get? How do they get advantages? They don't," he said.
"If anything, they're disadvantaged all the way through.
"They pay more for their grounds and a whole host of things. And it's not even the clubs you worry about so much, it's the supporter groups."
The three-time premiership coach suggested the era of free agency put even greater strain on cash-strapped clubs in the bottom half of the ladder.
"It's already been compromised by free agency. Not many players are going to put their hands up to play for the bottom sides," he said.
"But sides in the bottom will lose players who want to play for the top sides. So straight away they get stronger, and the sides down the bottom get weaker."