Iceland review - 2006, Qupperneq 110

Iceland review - 2006, Qupperneq 110
108 BUSINESS SUPPLEMENT Iceland is a wealthy industrial country with one of the highest levels of GDP per capita in the world. It is a member of the OECD and, together with the European Union (EU) countries and Norway and Liechtenstein, a member of the European Economic Area (EEA). Under the EEA Agreement, Iceland is a part of the EU’s single market and is obliged to transpose various Community legislation into Icelandic law – for example, its financial market legislation. Consequently, Iceland’s financial market regulatory framework and financial supervision are based on best industrial country practice. Deregulation and liberalization of the economy entered full swing in the 1990s, culminating in the full privatization of commercial banks and, most recently, Iceland Telecom. Since the end of the 1990s, two waves of foreign direct investment have added large-scale production capacity to Iceland’s long-established aluminum sector. In tandem, liberalization and heavy foreign investment have been the main drivers of robust economic growth in recent years. LOW PUBLIC SECTOR DEBT The treasury has produced an almost unbroken fiscal surplus for the past ten years. Along with proceeds from privatization, this has allowed the government to repay debt on an unprecedented scale. The treasury’s overall domestic and foreign debt had fallen to below 20 percent of GDP at the end of 2005. External treasury debt was below ten percent and, after allowance for its deposits in the Central Bank, so was net treasury debt. Debt reduction is set to continue in 2006. The pension fund system in Iceland is unique in the sense that it is to a large extent fully funded. Unlike most other industrial countries, Iceland does not face a future public finance burden stemming from the aging of the population – which is relatively young anyway. Total assets of pension funds were equivalent to about 120 percent of GDP at the end of 2005. In 2001, the Central Bank of Iceland adopted an inflation target as the framework for monetary policy. This means that the exchange rate is freely floating and the Bank seeks to maintain inflation as close as possible to two and a half percent as measured by the CPI. An important characteristic of the Icelandic economy is its resilience and adaptability. This was recently demonstrated in a quick adjustment to internal and external balance after the overheating of the economy around the turn of the century. After reaching ten percent of GDP in 2000, the deficit on the current account had disappeared by 2002, and inflation was quickly brought to target following a temporary surge. The exchange rate played an important role in bringing about the correction of the external imbalance. THE CENTRAL BANK’S CHALLENGE BALANCING STABILITY & GROWTH:
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Iceland review

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