Sue's Blog

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Goodbye Canada and Corruption - Hello Iceland

A lesson from Iceland - I have added bolding to areas of the Story.
You must love the People First approach.
Iceland with half our population and less natural resources - they are doing fine.

Icelandic Economy Bounces Back From Brink

Debt relief put people’s needs ahead of markets


Iceland’s economy suffered a meltdown in 2008, with its banks defaulting on $85 billion. In 2009 its citizens took to the streets and demanded action from the government against those they saw as responsible for the crisis. The government responded, putting people before markets, and now Iceland’s economy is outgrowing the euro one and, on average, the developed world.

Bloomberg reported that after it was determined in October 2008 that the banks could not be saved, the government intervened. It ring-fenced domestic accounts and shut out international creditors. Iceland’s central bank prevented the sell off of krona through capital controls, and new banks were created that were controlled by the state. Then the government and the state-controlled banks agreed that amounts in excess of 110% of home values would be forgiven on mortgages.

The country’s supreme court also ruled in 2010 that debts indexed to foreign currencies were illegal, which saved households from having to cover losses resulting from drops in the value of the krona.
An Icelandic Financial Services Association report cited by Bloomberg pointed out that the country’s banks have forgiven loans amounting to 13% of Iceland’s GDP. That lessened the debt load of the population.

In addition, the government is investigating, and prosecuting, numerous prominent figures from the meltdown. Currently more than 200 face criminal charges and a special prosecutor has said as many as 90 may be indicted.

Lars Christensen, chief emerging markets economist at Danske Bank in Copenhagen, was quoted saying, “You could safely say that Iceland holds the world record in household debt relief. Iceland followed the textbook example of what is required in a crisis. Any economist would agree with that.”
The result? According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Iceland’s economy is in line to expand 2.4% both this year and next, after growth of 2.9% last year and in the wake of shrinkage of 6.7% in 2009. In contrast, the OECD estimated in November that the euro area will only expand by 0.2% and the OECD area by 1.6% in 2012.

Not only that, but the cost to insure against an Icelandic default is about the same as to insure against a credit event in Belgium. And Icelanders are no longer eager to join the eurozone. Most would rather stay solo. Housing as an element of the consumer price index is only down about 3% from what it was in September 2008, just prior to the collapse.

Fitch Ratings just last week also conceded that Iceland’s approach has worked, raising the country’s rating to investment grade with a stable outlook. At the time it said that Iceland’s “unorthodox crisis policy response has succeeded.”

Thorolfur Matthiasson, an economics professor at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik, was quoted saying, “The lesson to be learned from Iceland’s crisis is that if other countries think it’s necessary to write down debts, they should look at how successful the 110% agreement was here. It’s the broadest agreement that’s been undertaken.”

According to Christensen at Danske Bank, “the bottom line is that if households are insolvent, then the banks just have to go along with it, regardless of the interests of the banks.”

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The time has come that we choose another direction, that being Independance again.

Iceland is an independant country and it can determine its own destiny. The province of Newfoundland and Labrador, too, can do the same. We have a near perfect Strategic Geographic Location, we still have plenty of great Natural Resources and we have the willpower to do so.

We have been angered here in this province just like a wounded animal. We have been exploited of our natural and human resources and as a result we ended up the poor province of Canada.

We,unlike Iceland, have been unable to plot our own destiny because that was done for us by the OTTAWA Government, which was under pressure from the other 9 provinces ( 301 FEDERAL SEATS) because they wanted to create economies for themselves from the natural resource base that NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR brought into Canada and was pilfered from the province of Newfoundland and Labrador to fulfill their wants.

As a result the people of Newfoundland and Labrador had their destiny and their chance for economic freedom stolen, simply because Ottawa took away our freedom when we became the 10th province of Canads by 'hook or by crook'.

The time has come for a referendum on Separation, we have no other choice after 63 years of being enslaved to Canadian inequality. Canadians believe, I am sure, in the 'ism' of the Perils of Inequality, if they didn'nt we would have been equal, given the FINE STRATEGIC LOCATION and NATURAL NATURAL RESOURCE BASE that we brought into Canada 63 years ago.

The time for a Referendum on Separation is up, we need to do it in the very near future.