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The FDIC: What It Is and Why You (Might) Need It

David Weliver

David Weliver

Posted Sep. 22, 2008
Tagged: , ,

The Federal Deposit Insurance Company (FDIC) is a division of the United States government that insures bank deposits up to $100,000 each. The FDIC was founded after the Great Depression when many troubled U.S. banks failed under economic pressures and the additional weight of panicking customers simultaneously demanding their funds. Usually, consumers like you and me never think twice about whether the money we put into our bank accounts will be there tomorrow. But today we do.

Why might your bank fail? Banks earn profits by taking the money we deposit and investing it. Banks invest in securities like stocks, but also in loans like mortgages and credit cards. As you have read, banks made way too many risky mortgage loans in the last decade. Consumers cannot repay those loans, and banks are not recouping their investments. As the overall stock market struggles, banks are losing money on other investments, too.

As this trend continues, some banks will no longer have money to lend, meaning they cannot earn additional profits and, ultimately, may not have enough cash to settle depositors’ accounts.

How to protect yourself: never keep more than $100,000 in cash at any one bank. If you are married, you can safely keep up to $200,000 in a joint account. If the worst happens and your bank fails, check with the FDIC for instructions on how to recover your funds. Don’t panic. Although today’s economic climate is straining all financial institutions—including the FDIC—the government will ensure that the FDIC can meet obligations for the foreseeable future.

On the downside, the FDIC is taxpayer-supported. Should it begin paying out depositors at an unusually large number of banks, we may all see tax hikes down the road.

Originally posted at Money Under 30

David is the founder of the personal finance blog MoneyUnder30.com and editorial director for the banking comparison Web site BankAround.com. His writing has appeared in SmartMoney and Inc. magazines, and his blog has been featured on TheStreet.com and USNews.com.

David admits he's not a natural-born tightwad and he thinks being fanatically frugal is, frankly, just plain boring. He believes that enjoying life today and building a solid tomorrow shouldn't be mutually exclusive. When he's not dutifully typing away beneath the romantic blue glow of his computer monitor, David enjoys playing the guitar, exploring small towns, backwoods, and winding rivers around the U.S., and savoring the occasional glass of good scotch. See David Weliver's other posts and profile.

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1 Comment

Jason Simon
10/08/08 08:29 AM

The recent economic bailout bill included a provision for increasing FDIC insurance limits to $250,000 per depositor per insured bank. This move is intended to shore up confidence and improve liquidity in banks across the country.

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