Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005
Merged the Bank Insurance Fund and the Savings Association Insurance Fund
Increased deposit insurance on individual retirement accounts to $250,000 per account
Authorized FDIC to revise its system of risk-based premiums
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010
Creates Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to regulate mortgages and other financial products
Routine derivatives required to be cleared through central clearinghouses and exchanges
New government resolution authority to allow government takeovers of financial holding companies
Creates Financial Stability Oversight Council to regulate systemically important financial institutions
Bans banks from proprietary trading and owning large percentage of hedge funds
(continued)
Chapter 18 Financial Regulation
443
2
The full story of the S&L and banking crisis of the 1980s is a fascinating one, with juicy scandals,
even involving Senator John McCain, who was a presidential candidate in 2008. Web Chapter 25 dis-
cusses in more detail why this crisis happened, as well as the legislation in 1989 and 1991 that dealt
with this crisis.
1935 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
2010
2005
0
50
25
75
100
150
200
Number of Bank
Failures
125
175
225
F I G U R E 1 8 . 1
Bank Failures in the United States, 1934–2009
Source:
www.fdic.gov/bank/historical/bank/index.html
.
The 1980s Savings and Loan and Banking Crisis
Before the 1980s, financial regulation in the United States seemed largely effective
in promoting a safe and sound banking system. In contrast to the pre-1934 period,
when bank failures were common and depositors frequently suffered losses, the period
from 1934 to 1980 was one in which bank failures were a rarity, averaging 15 per
year for commercial banks and fewer than five per year for savings and loan associa-
tions (S&Ls). After 1981, this rosy picture changed dramatically. Failures in both com-
mercial banks and S&Ls climbed to levels more than 10 times greater than in earlier
years, as can be seen in Figure 18.1. Why did this happen? How did a regulatory sys-
tem that seemed to be working well for half a century find itself in so much trouble.
2
The story starts with the burst of financial innovation in the 1960s, 1970s, and
early 1980s. As we will see in Chapter 19, financial innovation decreased the prof-
itability of certain traditional lines of business for commercial banks. Banks now faced
increased competition for their sources of funds from new financial institutions, such
as money market mutual funds, even as they were losing commercial lending busi-
ness to the commercial paper market and securitization.
With the decreasing profitability of their traditional business, by the mid-1980s
commercial banks were forced to seek out new and potentially risky business to keep
their profits up. Specifically, they placed a greater percentage of their total loans in
444
Part 6 The Financial Institutions Industry
real estate and in credit extended to assist corporate takeovers and leveraged buyouts
(called highly leveraged transaction loans). The existence of deposit insurance
increased moral hazard for banks because insured depositors had little incentive to
keep the banks from taking on too much risk. Regardless of how much risk banks were
taking, deposit insurance guaranteed that depositors would not suffer any losses.
Adding fuel to the fire, financial innovation produced new financial instruments
that widened the scope of risk taking. New markets in financial futures, junk bonds,
swaps, and other instruments made it easier for banks to take on extra risk—
making the moral hazard problem more severe. New legislation that deregulated
the banking industry in the early 1980s, the Depository Institutions Deregulation and
Monetary Control Act (DIDMCA) of 1980 and the Depository Institutions (Garn–St.
Germain) Act of 1982, gave expanded powers to the S&Ls and mutual savings banks
to engage in new risky activities. These thrift institutions, which had been restricted
almost entirely to making loans for home mortgages, now were allowed to have up
to 40% of their assets in commercial real estate loans, up to 30% in consumer lend-
ing, and up to 10% in commercial loans and leases. In the wake of this legislation, S&L
regulators allowed up to 10% of assets to be in junk bonds or in direct investments
(common stocks, real estate, service corporations, and operating subsidiaries).
In addition, the DIDMCA of 1980 increased the mandated amount of federal deposit
insurance from $40,000 per account to $100,000 and phased out Regulation Q deposit-
rate ceilings. Banks and S&Ls that wanted to pursue rapid growth and take on risky
projects could now attract the necessary funds by issuing larger-denomination insured
certificates of deposit with interest rates much higher than those being offered by their
competitors. Without deposit insurance, high interest rates would not have induced
depositors to provide the high-rolling banks with funds because of the realistic expec-
tation that they might not get the funds back. But with deposit insurance and wide-
spread use of the purchase-and-assumption method to handle failed banks, the
government was guaranteeing that the deposits were safe, so depositors were more
than happy to make deposits in banks with the highest interest rates.
As a result of these forces, commercial banks did take on excessive risks and
began to suffer substantial losses. The outcome was that bank failures rose to a
level of 200 per year by the late 1980s. The resulting losses for the FDIC meant that
it would have depleted its Bank Insurance Fund by 1992, requiring that this fund
be recapitalized. The Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act
(FIRREA) of 1989 (described in Web Chapter 25) provided a bailout of the savings
and loan industry at a cost to taxpayers on the order of $200 billion, 4% of GDP.
This legislation did not recapitalize the Bank Insurance Fund and did not focus on
the underlying adverse selection and moral hazard problems created by deposit insur-
ance. It did, however, mandate that the U.S. Treasury produce a comprehensive study
and plan for reform of the federal deposit insurance system. After this study appeared
in 1991, Congress passed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement
Act (FDICIA), which engendered major reforms in the bank regulatory system.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Improvement Act of 1991
FDICIA’s provisions were designed to serve two purposes: to recapitalize the Bank
Insurance Fund of the FDIC and to reform the deposit insurance and regulatory
system so that taxpayer losses would be minimized.
Chapter 18 Financial Regulation
445
3
A further discussion of how well FDICIA has worked and other proposed reforms of the banking
regulatory system appears in an appendix to this chapter that can be found on this book’s Web site at
www.pearsonhighered.com/mishkin_eakins
.
FDICIA recapitalized the Bank Insurance Fund by increasing the FDIC’s ability
to borrow from the Treasury and also mandated that the FDIC assess higher deposit
insurance premiums until it could pay back its loans and achieve a level of reserves
in its insurance funds that would equal 1.25% of insured deposits.
The bill reduced the scope of deposit insurance in several ways, but the most
important one is that the too-big-to-fail doctrine has been substantially limited. The
FDIC must now close failed banks using the least costly method, thus making it far
more likely that uninsured depositors will suffer losses. An exception to this provi-
sion, whereby a bank would be declared too big to fail so that all depositors, both
insured and uninsured, would be fully protected, would be allowed only if not doing
so would “have serious adverse effects on economic conditions or financial stabil-
ity.” Furthermore, to invoke the too-big-to-fail policy, a two-thirds majority of both
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the directors of the FDIC,
as well as the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, are required. Furthermore,
FDICIA requires that the Fed share the FDIC’s losses if long-term Fed lending to a
bank that fails increases the FDIC’s losses.
Probably the most important feature of FDICIA is its prompt corrective action
provisions described earlier in the chapter that require the FDIC to intervene ear-
lier and more vigorously when a bank gets into trouble.
FDICIA also instructed the FDIC to come up with risk-based insurance premi-
ums. The system the FDIC put in place did not work very well, however, because it
resulted in more than 90% of the banks, with over 95% of the deposits, paying the
same premium. The Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 attempted to rem-
edy this by requiring banks that take on more risk to pay higher insurance premi-
ums regardless of the overall soundness of the banking system or level of the
insurance fund relative to insured deposits. Under this act, premiums paid by the
riskiest banks will be 10 to 20 times greater than the least-risky banks will pay. (Other
provisions of FDICIA and the Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 are listed
in Table 18.1 earlier in this chapter.)
FDICIA was an important step in the right direction because it increased the
incentives for banks to hold more capital and decreased their incentives to take on
excessive risks. Concerns that FDICIA did not adequately address risk-based pre-
miums have been dealt with. Remaining concerns about the too-big-to-fail problem
and other issues related to deposit insurance mean that economists and regulators
will continue to search for further reforms that might help promote the safety and
soundness of the banking system.
3
Banking Crises Throughout the World in Recent Years
Because misery loves company, it may make you feel better to know that the United
States has by no means been alone in suffering banking crises both in the
1980s and then again during the 2007–2009 financial crisis. Indeed, as Figure 18.2
and Table 18.2 illustrate, banking crises have struck a large number of countries
throughout the world since the 1980s, and many of them have been substantially
worse than the ones we have experienced.
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