national financial scandal in American history. By the end of the decade, large numbers of S&Ls had tumbled
into insolvency; about half of the S&Ls that had been in business in 1970 no longer existed in 1989. The
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, which insured depositors' money, itself became insolvent. In 1989,
Congress and the president agreed on a taxpayer-financed bailout measure known as the Financial Institutions
Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA). This act provided $50 billion to close failed S&Ls, totally
changed the regulatory apparatus for savings institutions, and imposed new portfolio constraints. A new government
agency called the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) was set up to liquidate insolvent institutions. In March 1990,
another $78,000 million was pumped into the RTC. But estimates of the total cost of the S&L cleanup continued
to mount, topping the $200,000 million mark. Americans have taken a number of lessons away from the post-war
experience with banking regulation. First, government deposit insurance protects small savers and helps maintain
the stability of the banking system by reducing the danger of runs on banks. Second, interest rate controls do not
work. Third, government should not direct what investments banks should make; rather, investments should be
determined on the basis of market forces and economic merit. Fourth, bank lending to insiders or to companies
affiliated with insiders should be closely watched and limited. Fifth, when banks do become insolvent, they should
be closed as quickly as possible, their depositors paid off, and their loans transferred to other, healthier
lenders. Keeping insolvent institutions in operation merely freezes lending and can stifle economic activity.
Finally, while banks generally should be allowed to fail when they become insolvent, Americans believe that the
government has a continuing responsibility to supervise them and prevent them from engaging in unnecessarily risky
lending that could damage the entire economy. In addition to direct supervision, regulators increasingly emphasize
the importance of requiring banks to raise a substantial amount of their own capital. Besides giving banks funds
that can be used to absorb losses, capital requirements encourage bank owners to operate 81
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