Fifty-four banks failed in the first quarter of 1987, more than in any quarter since 1933. Because bank failures are linked to bank risk, most of the regulatory proposals offered to control the growing number of bank failures are designed to encourage depositors to exert market discipline on bank officers and directors, thereby decreasing bank risk and lowering the incidence of bank failure. For policies relying on depositor discipline to be effective, depositors\u27 assets must be exposed to some risk, so that depositors will have an incentive to check the soundness of the banks in which they have deposited their money. At present, however, bank failure policy uses federal bailouts and arranged mergers for most failing banks, providing ess...