> When dues and the proceeds of bank liquidations are insufficient, it can borrow from the federal government, or issue debt through the Federal Financing Bank on terms that the bank decides
It’s not fully funded by the banks & borrows from the government when it’s short. I don’t know how to account the government borrowing from itself, but I wouldn’t think it’s necessarily “free”. Yes it does get paid back, but you’re borrowing on very preferential terms that aren’t available to the public so there is as cost to the broader economy.
> It’s not fully funded by the banks & borrows from the government when it’s short.
While it's true that the FDIC is "backed by the full faith and credit of the US Government" it is funded by the banks and by interest from treasuries [0]. Has there ever been a case when the FDIC actually ran out of funds and had to be bailed out?
> During two banking crises—the savings and loan crisis and the Global Financial Crisis—the FDIC has expended its entire insurance fund. On these occasions it has met insurance obligations directly from operating cash, or by borrowing through the Federal Financing Bank. Another option, which it has never used, is a direct line of credit with the Treasury on which it can borrow up to $100 billion.
So yes, it ran out of funds & had to borrow. It has not yet experienced a shock bad enough to leverage the Treasury line of credit but that’s a fig leaf IMO. The 2008 crisis saw the government bailing out banks through TARP to shore up failing banks to the tune of 700B. Without that, FDIC would have failed. So from that perspective, yet it was bailed out in 2008 & the funding from members wouldn’t have been anywhere near sufficient. That’s why I don’t understand the political football around TARP - “the full faith and credit of the US government” would have been meaningless if FDIC failed as that would have sent a giant shockwave of trust loss through the broader population as everyday people would have lost huge savings.
Did it? The FDIC is funded by banks, not the government.