TV

A St. Patrick’s Day “Real Time” Posed Big Questions About Banks

Bill Maher also debunked the idea of “national divorce”

Bill Maher

Bill Maher on the March 17 episode of "Real Time."

By Tobias Carroll

Should you be worried about the closure of Silicon Valley Bank and the other issues with financial institutions that have followed in its wake? That question suffused this week’s episode of Real Time With Bill Maher. Maher alluded to it in his opening monologue, in which he spoke about feeling reminded of the last time banks in the U.S. began failing.

It was also the first conversational thread that Maher raised with this episode’s panelists, Representative Elissa Slotkin and Andrew Yang. For her part, Slotkin argued that the government should engage in more overtly punitive actions than it did after the 2008 financial crisis.

“It is perfectly reasonable, I think, to have a conversation about bringing him out and showing that you can’t just fail and take risks with people’s money,” Slotkin said. 

Yang argued that the backstop taken to protect depositors was the correct decision. He addressed another aspect of the current moment — namely, people closing their accounts at regional banks and moving them to the “too big to fail” institutions. Yang drew the logical conclusion there — that if this leads to further industry consolidation, that’s also an undesirable outcome.

Yang also invoked one of the more surreal images you’re likely to envision, saying, “We’re in the early innings of a disaster movie when it comes to the financial sector.” But he immediately followed it up with a more sobering observation: that the Treasury securities Silicon Valley Bank had purchased that led to its collapse were not exactly a high-risk investment.

Over the course of the conversation, the trio offered various answers to the question of how worried viewers should be. Maher still seemed fairly shaken by the time the conversation changed directions; Slotkin, meanwhile, argued that mechanisms put into place after 2008 were likely to work. And Yang took the long view. We’ll know soon enough which of them got it right.

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Some other thoughts on the episode:

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