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by Thomas E. Pulkkinen and Eric S. Rosengren
May/June 1993
The failure of the Rhode Island Share and Deposit
Indemnity Corporation (RISDIC), a private insurance
fund, and the closure of its 45 remaining member institutions
froze the accounts of 300,000 individuals and 10 percent
of all deposits in the state. While the closure of two
institutions triggered RISDIC’s demise, flaws
in both design and management had set the stage for
failure and are the focus of this article. The authors
group RISDIC’s problems into three categories:
risk concentrations, control of the insurance fund by
those it insured, and RISDIC’s inadequate regulatory
oversight of members.
Concentrations of risks abounded. Both the fund and
the geographic area it covered were small, and member
institutions lent heavily in real estate. The fund’s
failure to sufficiently reserve against this exposure
was particularly problematic: RISDIC could not have
covered major losses at any one of its 10 largest members.
RISDIC also neglected standard regulatory practices
in supervising member institutions. Adequate deposit
insurance rests on several fundamentals, among them
diversification, independent supervision, disclosure
of weaknesses, and adequate reserves; RISDIC managed
to delay but not avoid the consequences of neglecting
these principles.
Full-text article 
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