Iceland review - 2015, Qupperneq 63

Iceland review - 2015, Qupperneq 63
ICELAND REVIEW 61 BOOM AND BUST The Icelandic economy had in the 20th century grown faster than others in Europe, moving from being one of the poorest in the continent to towering over some of the world lists measuring econom- ic prosperity. By the early years of the new millennium conservative-led governments had deregulated financial services, plugged Iceland into the European internal market and privatized its state-owned banks. In a massive move coined as the ‘outvasion,’ Iceland went from being an isolated out- post to becoming a global player in the banking world. The economy was soon divided between three cross-border bank- ing conglomerates, centered on Kaupþing, Landsbanki and Glitnir. Each was run by a group of young alpha-males who were preoccupied with competing with each other. In this climate the Icelandic financial sector was, in only a few years, to grow to ten times the country’s GDP—before col- lapsing so spectacularly. In early 2008, the massive capital inflow of 2003 to 2007 reversed, as it did in other high-yield countries like the Baltics, Greece, Portugal and Spain. The carry trade, which had helped to keep the lid on inflation by hiking the value of the króna, was now leaving the economy exposed to nervous reversal. Subsequently the Icelandic banks were finding it ever more difficult to access funds. When the international crisis hit, Iceland’s financial sector had become unsustainable. All of the three cross-bor- der banks, amounting to 85 percent of the country’s financial system, came tumbling down within a single week in early October 2008. The stock exchange and the equity market were virtually wiped out and the tiny currency, the ISK, tanked, spurring rampant inflation which, in the following weeks and months, was eating up most people’s savings. Property values dropped by more than a third and unemployment approached levels never seen before in the life of the young republic. The ruined currency finally stabilized below half its pre-crisis value after introduction of currency controls. After the crash many ambitious proposals and initiatives for widespread political reform were caught in what can be described as a new critical order taking hold in the Icelandic post-crisis socie- ty, which was marked by political infighting. Still some initiatives had significant effect. In a controversial move, Iceland’s former Prime Minister Geir H. Haarde was sentenced to suspended imprisonment for not placing the risk of a banking crisis on the agenda of formal cabinet meetings. A handful of bankers thought to be responsible for the crisis were investigated and some sen- tences were passed. Surely the most significant to date was the conviction in the Al-Thani case in February 2015. * Eiríkur Bergmann Einarsson is Professor of Politics and Director of the Centre for European Studies at Bifröst University in Iceland. His pub- lications include Iceland and the International Financial Crisis: Boom, Bust & Recovery released by Palgrave Macmillian in 2014. BANKING COLLAPSE Hegningarhúsið prison in downtown Reykjavík. P H O TO B Y P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N .
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Iceland review

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