Depository Institution Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 (United States)
In 1980 Congress passed the Depository Institutions
Deregulation Monetary Control Act (DIDMCA), the most important piece of banking
legislation in the United States since the Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933.
The DIDMCA signaled a marked shift in government banking policy in the direction
of a deregulated banking system. This was a sharp contrast to the banking
legislation of the 1930s, which had added to the regulation of the banking
industry.
One of the more important provisions of the DIDMCA authorized all depository
institutions to offer negotiated order of withdrawal (NOW) accounts. These
accounts are interest-bearing savings accounts with check-writing privileges
that depositors basically treat as checking accounts. The banking legislation of
the 1930s had forbidden banks from paying interest on checking accounts. In the
1970s thrift institutions, faced with an outflow of funds and hoping to make
their savings accounts more attractive, received permission from banking
regulators to let thrift depositors write checks on savings accounts. Before the
DIDMCA only savings and loans (S&Ls), credit unions, and other thrift
institutions offered NOW accounts. In practical terms, the DIDMCA enabled all
depository institutions, including commercial banks, to pay interest on checking
accounts. The DIDMCA also removed interest-bearing deposits from the
restrictions of state usury laws.
A related provision of the DIDMCA made automatic transfer accounts legal,
further lifting restrictions on interest-bearing checking accounts. These
accounts let commercial banks automatically transfer unused checking account
funds into interest-bearing savings accounts. Because checking accounts could
not pay interest before the DIDMCA, the ability to switch funds from checking to
savings as needed gave checking accounts some of the advantages of
interest-bearing accounts.
By the mid-1970s technology had made switching an inexpensive procedure, but
the courts had ruled that automatic transfer accounts violated the law against
the payment of interest on checking accounts. Therefore legislation was
necessary to remove the prohibition on automatic transfer accounts.
The DIDMCA called for the formation of a Depository Institutions Deregulation
Committee charged with overseeing the removal of interest-rate ceilings on all
deposits, except business deposits at commercial banks. This committee was
composed of the heads of the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve Board, the
Federal Depository Insurance Corporation, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, and
the National Credit Union Administrator. The Comptroller of the Currency served
as a nonvoting member.
The DIDMCA freed from state usury ceilings residential mortgages and
agricultural and business loans in excess of $25,000 and extended partial
exemption to other loans made by state-chartered banks, savings and loan
institutions, and credit unions. States had the option to reinstate state usury
ceilings on these loans, but action had to be taken by 1 April 1983.
The DIDMCA gave federally chartered S&Ls permission to make consumer
loans, and invest in commercial paper and corporate debt securities. Up to 20
percent of a savings and loan’s assets could be committed to these uses. The
DIDMCA also added credit cards, trusts, and fiduciary services to the range of
services offered by S&Ls. In a nutshell, the S&Ls now compete with
commercial banks in a wider range of services.
The DIDMCA authorized mutual savings banks with federal charters to enter the
market for business loans. These institutions could invest up to 5 percent of
their assets in these loans, and the business borrowers could not receive
checking privileges associated with these loans
The DIDMCA put all federally insured depository institutions under the
reserve requirements imposed by the Federal Reserve System. Before the DIDMCA
the Federal Reserve System set reserve requirements of federally chartered
commercial banks. (Reserve requirements set the percentage of checking and
savings deposits that must be retained in the form of vault cash or a deposit at
a Federal Reserve Bank.) Reserve requirements protect depositors (or the FDIC)
by making bank assets more liquid and less risky, but they also leave bank
assets less profitable because reserves pay no interest. State laws had
invariably set lower reserve requirements, as a percentage, for state-chartered
banks. The DIDMCA increased the power of reserve requirements as a tool of
monetary regulation, and leveled the playing field between federally chartered
institutions and state-chartered institutions.
The consumer is the clear beneficiary of competition in most industries, but
when a bank fails the bank’s customers suffer as much as the bank’s owners.
Depression-era legislation reduced competition between banks to stem the tide of
bank failures. The DIDMCA took an important step toward restoring competition to
the banking industry.
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