Just like your $25k car has an insurance premium, these bank accounts are also insured because they pay a premium. Now if your car's value is $250k, wouldn't you expect the insurance premium to be higher? What if your car's value is infinity dollars?
I love when people on HN start their comment with "Pretty Simple" or a variant of it, because it almost always means they're wrong.
The Fed government as an issuer of currency can fund anything to infinity so long as Congress authorizes it. They change numbers in a spread sheet to create money. Rules like FDIC insurance are vestiges of a gold standard era when money was not fungible.
What? Money was always fungible. In the case of crisis, sure fed can step in, but you can't except basic economics to go away when you except to be insured to infinity dollars (and for what cost, btw?)
It is not the Fed itself, but a separate entity that doesn't receive any federal funding. The $250k insurance you hear about is not free, it has a cost associated with it: https://www.fdic.gov/deposit/insurance/assessments/proposed....
Just like your $25k car has an insurance premium, these bank accounts are also insured because they pay a premium. Now if your car's value is $250k, wouldn't you expect the insurance premium to be higher? What if your car's value is infinity dollars?
I love when people on HN start their comment with "Pretty Simple" or a variant of it, because it almost always means they're wrong.