TLDR:
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Senator Hagerty urge FDIC reform to protect community banks from collapse.
- Community banks have lost 45% of their numbers since 2010, shrinking their share of U.S. loans and assets.
- The Dodd-Frank Act entrenched big banks, creating an uneven playing field for small and mid-sized lenders.
- Raising FDIC limits could restore balance, helping local banks support small businesses and rural economies.
The push to restore balance in America’s banking system is gaining ground again.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Senator Bill Hagerty are calling for reforms to protect local banks from the weight of federal regulation. Their joint response, published in The Wall Street Journal, questions how the Dodd-Frank Act continues to favor large institutions over regional and community lenders.
They argue that smaller banks are being squeezed out of the market. The proposal centers on one fix: raising the FDIC insurance cap to better safeguard payroll and business accounts.
How the Dodd-Frank Act Reshaped the Banking Landscape
Since the 2010 passage of Dodd-Frank, thousands of community banks have vanished.
Bessent and Hagerty noted that the U.S. has lost about 3,600 since then, a drop of 45%. They explained that while the law aimed to prevent another financial collapse, it created an uneven playing field.
Big banks now enjoy what markets see as an unofficial government guarantee, driving customers away from smaller rivals.
This shift became clear in 2023 when regional lenders faced deposit flight during market panic. Emergency measures followed, reinforcing public trust in the biggest institutions. Smaller banks, however, were left exposed.
As the article pointed out, the gap between perceived safety at large banks and actual support for community lenders widened. That imbalance, the pair said, has hurt Main Street most.
Community banks now hold just 15% of total U.S. banking assets, down from 23% fifteen years ago. Yet they continue to provide 40% of small business loans and 70% of agricultural loans nationwide. Their local reach keeps small enterprises running, but tighter regulation and deposit uncertainty have made survival harder.
FDIC Insurance Reform Seen as a Lifeline
The proposed solution centers on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Bessent and Hagerty suggest raising the insurance limit to capture payroll and business deposits.
Doing so, they argued, would give small lenders a fairer chance to compete with large financial groups. It would also restore confidence among business owners who rely on local institutions for credit and savings.
Such a move, they added, could reverse the trend of consolidation that’s hollowed out regional lending.
In their joint essay, they described community banks as the backbone of rural and suburban economies. These lenders, they said, fund Main Street businesses and sponsor local programs, not major stadiums or global ventures.
Supporting them, they wrote, is vital to keeping America’s financial network diverse and resilient.
Bessent emphasized that reforming the FDIC limit is not about undermining big banks. It’s about balancing opportunity. “A strong and stable system must include both,” he wrote.
By addressing structural disadvantages, he and Hagerty hope to bring smaller banks back into the economic conversation, one regulation at a time.
