THE CASE FOR RAISING THE FDIC CAP JUST DOESN'T ADD UP
The following information was released by the
Last week, Treasury Secretary
,
They note that "billions of dollars of deposits fled from regional and community banks to the largest banks" during the bank panic of 2023. Supposedly, people moved their deposits because they believed the largest banks enjoy implicit government backing (they're too big to fail). Because this implicit backing (allegedly) creates an unfair advantage for the largest banks, Bessent and Hagerty claim that raising the
At best, their story is incomplete.
As researchers from the
,
For nearly a century now,
,
Outflows Occurred Prior to 2023
Their argument is on even shakier ground, though. For starters, this outflow was an acceleration of a trend that began (roughly) in the spring of 2022.
Before
Then, as the
Their argument does not improve from there.
While this later round of deposits initially flowed from the super regionals to the largest banks, many of those depositors soon moved their deposits out of the banking system altogether. Obviously, if these depositors were so panicked and dependent on implicit government backing at the too-big-to-fail banks, they wouldn't have moved their money outside of the banking system.
Another fun fact is that during this post-SVB failure period, banks did offset the deposit outflows with new borrowings. And in this case, they used the private and public institutions that already existed, outside of the SRE situation, to satisfy their need for precautionary liquidity. That is, they relied on credit from the
So, while there was a net outflow of deposits after the SVB failure, banks used the institutions that are in place to provide emergency liquidity when such events occur. (These institutions could, perhaps, work even better with less government backing and better rules, but that's best left to another column.)
Outflows Don't Justify Raising the FDIC Cap
Either way, the basic justification Bessent and Hagerty lay out for raising the
Their plan expands "too big to fail" to smaller banks and expands into "too big to lose your customers." Their justification explicitly assumes that the federal government needs to step in so that banks don't lose deposits, even though the federal government already stands as a provider of emergency liquidity.
At its core, their plan suggests that the federal government must explicitly protect the 30 super-regional banks from losing customers at the risk of the typical American worker losing his or her job. That's a huge leap.
Taking the plan to its logical conclusion is even worse. It implies that the government should protect all businesses from losing customers. Call it whatever you like, that's not free enterprise.
The fact that some banks are larger or more successful than others does not justify tilting the system against those banks. And, to whatever extent special government advantages made those banks larger and more successful, the best solution is to get rid of those advantages.
Raising the FDIC Cap Broadens a Bad System
The
Bankers should be allowed to be bankers, just like any business owner should be allowed to run their business. If banks can build their business with uninsured depositors, more power to them. If it turns out they really need some kind of deposit insurance, then private markets should be allowed to provide as robust a solution as they can. That's what financial markets do, and the more we rely on
The truth is that a handful of banks now want more special protection based on the bumpy road they faced in 2023. But that road was bumpy, at least in part, because of the federal system we have in place. Expanding that system is the wrong solution, and the broader implications endanger the
The logic behind this latest expansion suggests that people should use their money based on what government officials fear might happen to someone else, rather than on one's own views of their best risk-reward trade-off. This reversal elevates a vague notion of the "greater good," defined by whoever is in power, above the freedom of the individual. Again, that's not free enterprise.
The math for this new proposal doesn't work, either. Raising the



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