FDIC isn't actually an insurance, it is a bank tax
  • JeddHamptonJeddHampton September 2008
    It's like social security for banks.

    Link

    QUOTE
    When FDIC head Shelia Bair says her agency might have to bolster the FDIC's insurance fund with Treasury borrowings to pay for the new spate of bank failures, a lot of us, this 40-year banking veteran included, assumed there's an actual FDIC fund in need of bolstering.

    We were wrong. As a former FDIC chairman, Bill Isaac, points out here, the FDIC Insurance Fund is an accounting fiction. It takes in premiums from banks, then turns those premiums over to the Treasury, which adds the money to the government's general coffers for "spending . . . on missiles, school lunches, water projects, and the like."

    The insurance premiums aren't really premiums at all, therefore. They're a tax by another name.

    Actually, it's worse than that. The FDIC, persisting in the myth that its fund really is an insurance pool, now proposes to raise the "premiums" it charges banks to make up for the "fund's" coming shortfall. The financially weakest banks will be hit with the biggest tax hikes.

    Which makes absolutely no sense. You don't need me to tell you the banking industry is on the ropes. The last thing it needs (or the economy needs, for that matter) is an expense hike that will inhibit banks' ability to rebuild capital, extend new loans, or both. If the FDIC wants to raise its bank tax once the industry has recovered, I suppose that's fine. But to raise taxes on the industry now is perhaps the dumbest thing the agency can possibly do. At the margin, the FDIC will be helping bring about more of the failures it says it wants to prevent.

    But this is the government we're talking about, so logic goes out the window. First, the FDIC insists its mythical bank insurance fund exists, when it really doesn't. Then the agency does what it can to run the imaginary fund's finances straight into the ground. Your tax dollars (sorry, "premiums") at work. . . .
  • NunesNunes September 2008
    Lehman Brothers just went under and didn't get bailed out. Just saying.
  • mungomungo September 2008
    I am currently sitting at my desk at Lehman Brothers.....
  • NunesNunes September 2008
    Ok it's just Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
    Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. announces It Intends to File Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Petition; No Other Lehman Brothers' U.S. Subsidiaries or Affiliates, including Its Broker-Dealer and Investment Management Subsidiaries, Are Included in the Filing

    This morning showed us images of employee after employee leaving the office with a box upon opening their email and finding out their job didn't exist any more.

    /Bets on how much money the leadership of LBH inc. makes off this collapse start at $1.
    //$250,000,000 in total compensation
    ///my guess.

    edit: very cool by the way. What affiliate/subsidiary/branch do you find your desk?
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