foreign banks

Americans are wary of bailouts as banking concerns mount – poll

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Americans are wary of bailouts as banking concerns mount – poll

US CAPITOL. The exterior of the US Capitol is seen at sunset in Washington, December 13, 2022.

Sarah Silbiger/REUTERS

A Reuters/Ipsos poll finds 84% of respondents – including strong majorities of Republicans and Democrats – think US taxpayers should not have to pay to resolve problems caused by irresponsible bank management

WASHINGTON, USA – A bipartisan majority of Americans oppose US taxpayers footing the bill when bad management causes a bank to fail, though Republican opposition to bank bailouts has softened over the last decade, a Reuters/Ipsos poll completed on Wednesday, March 15, found.

The poll’s results point to a potential political problem for Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration should the signs of shakiness in the US banking sector worsen and prompt more aggressive government action.

The two-day Reuters/Ipsos poll found 84% of respondents – including strong majorities of Republicans and Democrats – think taxpayers should not have to pay to resolve problems caused by irresponsible bank management.

Stock markets have swooned around the world since Silicon Valley Bank collapsed on Friday, March 10, as worried customers pulled their deposits. Two days later, New York’s Signature Bank closed. On Wednesday, US stocks fell sharply as turbulence at Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse revived fears of a new banking crisis.

Banks have been stressed in recent months by rising interest rates, which reduce demand for borrowing money. In a series of moves telegraphed in advance to investors, the US Federal Reserve, America’s central bank, has pushed interest rates higher over the last year in a bid to tame inflation.

Only 49% of Americans – 40% of Republicans and 55% of Democrats – said they favored government bailouts of financial institutions.

Still, support for bailouts was even more tepid a decade earlier, when the United States was emerging from a financial crisis which the government fought by spending hundreds of billions of dollars on bank bailouts. In a 2012 Reuters/Ipsos poll, only 20% of Republicans and 53% of Democrats said they supported bailouts.

About half of respondents to the Reuters/Ipsos poll said they had heard at least a fair amount about Silicon Valley Bank’s implosion.

Meanwhile, 68% said they had at least a fair amount of confidence in the stability of their own bank, and the same percentage had at least that level of confidence in banks more generally.

Some 77% of respondents said that shareholders and executives who profited from a bank in the days before it failed should have to return those funds to depositors.

US regulators promised to make whole all depositors at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, even those with accounts above the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)’s standard $250,000 limit, without taxpayers having to cover any costs. Businesses make up many of the bank clients whose money had not been previously guaranteed by the government.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll showed broad bipartisan support for Washington backing bank deposits. Around 78% of respondents said the government should guarantee the deposits of individuals and 70% said Washington should backstop company deposits.

But a strong bipartisan majority also said depositors in banks should understand the risk of using a bank to make deposits outside of FDIC limits.

Some experts say the more expansive deposit guarantees regulators are applying for the troubled banks already amount to a bailout because they remove people’s incentive to guard against financial risk.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted online, surveyed 1,004 people nationwide and had a credibility interval of about 4 percentage points in either direction. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!