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Keywords:Deposit insurance 

Conference Paper
Bond market discipline of banks

Proceedings , Paper 687

Working Paper
Deposit insurance, deposit deregulation and bank risk-taking

Research Working Paper , Paper 87-03

Journal Article
Post-resolution treatment of depositors at failed banks: implications for the severity of banking crises, systemic risk, and too big to fail

Losses from bank failures have significant adverse implications for bank stakeholders, as well as for the macroeconomy. This article examines the potential sources of such losses, in particular the losses that may occur after the date a bank is failed, and makes recommendations on how to minimize these losses.
Economic Perspectives , Volume 26 , Issue Q II

Conference Paper
The deterioration of bank asset quality

Proceedings , Paper 71

Conference Paper
Assessing the condition of the Bank Insurance Fund

Proceedings , Paper 309

Journal Article
The government's role in deposit insurance

Review , Issue Jan , Pages 3-34

Working Paper
A proposal for efficiently resolving out-of-the-money swap positions at large insolvent banks

Recent evidence suggests that bank regulators appear to be able to resolve insolvent large banks efficiently without either protecting uninsured deposits through invoking "too-big-to-fail" or causing serious harm to other banks or financial markets. But resolving swap positions at insolvent banks, particularly a bank's out-of-the-money positions, has received less attention. The FDIC can now either repudiate these contracts and treat the in-the-money counterparties as at-risk general creditors or transfer the contracts to a solvent bank. Both options have major drawbacks. Terminating ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-03-01

Journal Article
Statement to Congress, April 10, 1991 (H.R. 1505, Financial Institutions Safety and Consumer Choice Act of 1991)

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Jun

Conference Paper
How good are EU deposit insurance schemes?

Proceedings , Paper 732

Working Paper
Government policy and banking instability: \"overbanking\" in the 1920s

Excess capacity, or ?overbanking,? was cited by contemporaries as leading cause of bank failure during the 1920s. Many states that had high numbers of banks per capita in 1920 had high bank failure rates subsequently. This article finds that the number of banks per capita was highest in states that provided deposit insurance, set low minimum capital requirements, and restricted branching. Banks per capita declined the most over the 1920s in states where branching expanded, and in those suffering high failure rates because of falling incomes or instability caused by deposit insurance. Deposit ...
Working Papers , Paper 1992-007

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Thomson, James B. 19 items

Furlong, Frederick T. 15 items

Stern, Gary H. 15 items

Keeley, Michael C. 10 items

Greenspan, Alan 9 items

Kane, Edward J. 9 items

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