The purpose of our paper is to explain how and why federal deposit insurance-special-interest legislation that had failed in Congress for nearly fifty year-was adopted with near unanimity in 1933. We consider the forces in favor of, and against, federal deposit insurance from the nineteenth century to 1933. We argue that, even though the traditional supporters of federal deposit insurance had suffered repeated defeats and their power was at the nadir in 1933, the nature of the political struggle over deposit insurance changed in the 1930s from a battle waged in Congress among special interests to one that engaged the general public. The banking collapse focused the attention of the public on the otherwise esoteric political issue of banking reform and offered the supporters of deposit insurance the opportunity to wage a campaign to convince the public that federal deposit insurance was the best solution to banking instability.
NBER
1994