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 anureet
  • Posts: 22
  • Joined: Aug 06, 2021
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#89988
Hello,
I am extremely confused by this question. Your explanation states that " It does make sense, given the context, to believe that the argument assumes that the banks pass the cost of insurance on to their customers indiscriminately".
How can we assume that? Am I missing something in the stimulus. Because from my interpretation of the stimulus Banks pay for the premiums for insurance and not the depositors.

Regards,
Anureet Bhatti
 Rachael Wilkenfeld
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
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  • Joined: Dec 15, 2011
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#90008
Hi Anureet,

It's true from the stimulus that the banks pay the costs for the insurance. However, just because they pay for the insurance, doesn't mean they don't pass that cost along to customers.

Have you ever rented those short term car rentals like ZipCars? One of the things they advertise is that they cover insurance. Don't worry, they say, we have insurance covered. But even though they aren't making you pay directly for the cost of insurance, you better believe they work that cost into the price of the rental. They pass that cost along, even though they directly pay the premium.

Similarly here, even though the banks directly pay the premium for insurance, they probably pass that cost along to the customers. The question is if the cost is being passed along in a fair way, to the people who benefit from that insurance.

Hope that helps!
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 emilyjmyer
  • Posts: 48
  • Joined: May 11, 2022
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#96961
Hi!

I was extremely confused on this question, but I want to check to make sure that I understand it now.

The stimulus states that the government provides insurance and that the bank has to pay the premium for this insurance. But, if depositors are the one's benefiting from the insurance, then they should bear the cost of it. Thus, they bear of the cost of it by paying for the premium.

Answer choice C is correct because we assume that the bank does not already have a system of making depositors pay for their premiums.

If the banks had a way to ensure that depositors paid for their premiums, then every time that a depositor opened an insured account it would give them lower interest than someone who opened an uninsured account would get. The lower interest rate is the way that the bank is able to pay for the insurance premium.

Because in the stimulus we are told that banks pay for the premium we can assume that they do not have a system of having depositors indirectly pay for the premium through something like lower interest rates?

Thanks!
 Adam Tyson
PowerScore Staff
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#97343
Right, Emily! To simplify the argument, the author thinks it's unfair to make the banks pay when it is the depositors who get the benefit. The author must be assuming that the banks aren't passing the cost on to the customers in some way. If they were passing on that cost then the author would no longer have a reason to think it's unfair, because the depositors would already be bearing the cost, albeit indirectly.

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