FDIC 1933
The history of the FDIC started in 1933. In
1933, the banking crisis and the Great Depression were still
eating up the US economy and confidence. You can read about the
FDIC history here. In 1933, the
FDIC was officiated created by the Banking Act of 1933.
Before we discuss the Banking Act which
created the FDIC in 1933, let's recap what happened in 1933
prior to the creation of the FDIC.
Emergency Banking Act of 1933
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After the
Great Depression in 1929, the banking system
deteriorated in the Winter of 1932-1933. At the
time, Franklin D. Roosevelt was just elected as
the President in November 1932. Speculations of
currency devaluation hurt the economy even
more. More banks failed. The US financial
system was near total
collapse.
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On March 9, 1933, the House of
Representative passed a bill which the Senate quickly approved
and Congress then enacted the Emergency Banking Act of
1933.
Banking Act of 1933
After the Emergency Banking Act of 1933 came
the real Banking Act of 1933 which established the FDIC as a
temporary agency to restore public confidence in the banking
system as well as stabilize the financial system. A key element
of the Banking Act of 1933 was the Glass-Steagal Act.
What or Who created the FDIC?
Section 8 of the Glass-Steagal Act
created the FDIC.
The Banking Act of 1933 provided many jobs
for the newly created entity, the FDIC of 1933. The Banking
Act of 1933 required the FDIC to be appointed as the
receiver for all national banks and as the receiver for
insured state chartered banks as given by state laws.
In addition to creating the FDIC in 1933,
the Banking Act of 1933 also required the FDIC to organize a
Deposit Insurance National Bank or DINB for paying off the
insured deposits of each closed and failed bank. the DINB is
a chartered national bank. The law concerning the DINB was
later amended by the Banking Act of 1935. The FDIC was later
allowed to pay depositors directly or through an existing
bank.
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