Icelandic authorities have arrested the former chief executive of collapsed bank Kaupthing - the first high profile arrest in the wake of the tiny Nordic country's financial collapse.
Posts Tagged ‘Financial Collapse’
President of Iceland: Gordon Brown Should Step in to Solve Icesave
Sunday, March 7th, 2010
In an interview with BBC this Sunday morning President Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson said that Gordon Brown should step in to find an acceptable solution to the Icesave dispute. The President said that Brown had shown strong leadership when he fought for an international solution after the worldwide financial collapse. He should do the same guidance in the Icesave dispute. The biggest question after the referendum was what Brown would do. EU, IMF Terms Called “Blackmail”: Iceland and Latvia Should Just Say No
Monday, January 18th, 2010
An opinion piece written by Ellen Hodgson Brown J.D., a California attorney and the author of eleven books, including “Web of Debt: The Shocking Truth About Our Money System and How We Can Break Free,” available in English, Swedish and German:
Total financial collapse, once a problem only for developing countries, has now come to Europe. The International Monetary Fund is imposing its “austerity measures” on Iceland and Eastern Europe, with Latvia the hardest hit of the “Baltic Tigers.” But these are not your ordinary third world debtor supplicants. Historically, the Vikings of Iceland repeatedly repulsed British invaders; and Latvian tribes repulsed even the Vikings. If anyone can stand up to the IMF, these stalwart northern warriors can; and today they might even find an ally in each other.
Dozens of countries have defaulted on their debts in recent decades, the most recent being Dubai, which declared a debt moratorium on November 26, 2009. If the once lavishly-rich Arab emirate can default, more desperate countries can; and when the alternative is to destroy the local economy, it is hard to argue that they shouldn’t. That is particularly true when the legal grounds for imposing the creditors’ claims on the government are highly questionable. Both Iceland and Latvia have been saddled with responsibility for private obligations to which they were not parties. Economist Michael Hudson writes:
“The European Union and International Monetary Fund have told them to replace private debts with public obligations, and to pay by raising taxes, slashing public spending and obliging citizens to deplete their savings. Resentment is growing not only toward those who ran up these debts . . . but also toward the neoliberal foreign advisors and creditors who pressured these governments to sell off the banks and public infrastructure to insiders.”
Eva Joly, a Norwegian-French magistrate hired to investigate the Icelandic bank collapse, calls it blackmail. As a condition for receiving IMF loans and membership in the European Union, Iceland is being required to endorse an agreement in which it would reimburse Dutch and British depositors who lost money in the collapse of IceSave, an offshore division of Iceland’s leading private bank. But these are not debts the government is legally bound to assume; and Joly warns that succumbing to the EU’s demands will drain Iceland of its resources and its people, who are being forced to emigrate to find work.
Iceland’s economy contracted by 7.2% during the third quarter, the biggest fall on record. Latvia forecasts a 17.5% decline in the economy this year, with major cutbacks in public spending. As in other countries squeezed by neo-liberal tourniquets on productivity, employment and output are being crippled, bringing these economies to their knees.
The cynical view is that that may have been the intent. Instead of helping post-Soviet nations develop self-reliant economies, writes Marshall Auerback, “the West has viewed them as economic oysters to be broken up to indebt them in order to extract interest charges and capital gains, leaving them empty shells.”
But Iceland and Latvia could call the bluff of the IMF and EU, following the lead of Argentina in 2001. In the face of dire predictions that the economy would collapse without foreign credit, in 2001 it defied its creditors and simply walked away from its debts. By the fall of 2004, three years after a record default on a debt of more than $100 billion, the country was well on the road to recovery; and it achieved this feat without foreign help. The economy grew by 8 percent for 2 consecutive years. Exports increased, the currency was stable, investors were returning, and unemployment had eased. “This is a remarkable historical event, one that challenges 25 years of failed policies,” said economist Mark Weisbrot in a 2004 interview quoted in The New York Times. “While other countries are just limping along, Argentina is experiencing very healthy growth with no sign that it is unsustainable, and they’ve done it without having to make any concessions to get foreign capital inflows.”
To find the money for its remarkable development, Argentina did not need foreign investors. It issued its own money and credit through its own central bank. Earlier, when the national currency collapsed completely in 1995 and again after 2000, Argentine local governments issued local bonds that traded as currency. Provinces paid their employees with paper receipts called “Debt-Cancelling Bonds” that were in currency units equivalent to the Argentine Peso. The bonds canceled the provinces’ debts to their employees and could be spent in the community. The provinces had actually “monetized” their debts, turning their bonds into legal tender.
Issuing and lending currency is the sovereign right of governments, and it is a right that Iceland will lose if it joins the EU, which forbids member nations to borrow from their own central banks. Argentina is a large country with more resources than the small EU satellites, but new technologies are now available that could make even small countries self-sufficient. See David Blume, Alcohol Can Be a Gas.
For the full text of this article, including live hyperlinks to source materials, see www.webofdebt.com/articles.
Ellen Brown is a California attorney and the author of eleven books, including “Web of Debt: The Shocking Truth About Our Money System and How We Can Break Free,” available in English, Swedish and German. Her websites are www.webofdebt.com and www.ellenbrown.com.
The Currency Loans Were Legal – The Dark Side Of The Government’s Inept Solutions
Friday, December 4th, 2009Remember this man. He is one of the faces of Iceland who has been cast aside by his society.
The District Court of Reykjavik yesterday declared that the borrower of a currency loan was responsible for paying his loan fully, even if it had doubled in one year. The Court really had few other options, the agreement between lender and borrower is one where the bank lends foreign currency and it was the customer’s choice whether to take that option or one of a loan in ISK.
So much for the imbalance between the lender who is supposed to know more about finance and the borrower who is not an expert.
The Courts and society has determined that Iceland is a country built for banks, not people.
This probably means that all those who have been waiting to hear about the outcome of this court case and have loans in foreign currency can say goodbye to their former lives. Tens of thousands of Icelanders are going to become bankrupt or heavily strapped.
Meanwhile, us who didn’t take the risk of currency loans even if they were offered are also being thrown to the wolves. What choices did we have? Not choices similar to people in countries around us of loans that go down as you pay.
Force majeure anyone? Is it unfair to compare the financial collapse of Iceland to anything but a natural disaster, an extraordinary event?
Meanwhile the governor of the Central Bank has assured Icelandic MP’s that even if the IMF has come out and said that Iceland’s debts were even larger than 310% of GNP, then it is OK because included in that number are all private foreign debts which are going to be written off, making the picture much brighter.
So the government, the banks and the largest companies will all see write offs that they will not grant to their citizens themselves.
A tragic story has emerged of Olafur Jon Leosson, a roughly sixty year old truck driver who bought himself a new truck on a foreign currency loan when jobs were everywhere for him to put it to use. Then the jobs started disappearing, and then the currency dropped. He tried to negotiate with the banks, the financing company Lysing, everything. He took his own life recently as he had found the door shut everywhere.
Great is the shame of the government, Althingi and the financial institutions. Did they ever read Grapes of Wrath?
Related posts:
Sunday Times Book Review: Meltdown Iceland: How the Global Financial Crisis Bankrupted an Entire Country
Monday, October 12th, 2009Sunday Times Book Review of Meltdown Iceland by Roger Boyes
He calculates that the so-called Icelandic “financial elite” consisted of no more than 30 people. The new banks funded the politicians who had privatised them and global expansion came to follow a familiar pattern: “1) Icelandic bank with dubious credentials bids for established foreign bank using borrowed money; 2) targeted bank eagerly takes the offered cash, claiming to be acting in the interest of shareholders, then registers doubts with FSA or other regulatory body; 3) FSA contacts Icelandic regulator, who offers reassurance; 4) Icelandic regulator attends school reunion with Icelandic banker.”
Gradually it became clear that prime minister Oddsson had created a monster that was devouring his own country. By the time he left office in 2004, the assets of the three big banks — Glitnir, Kaupthing and Landsbanki — were as large as the country’s gross domestic product; by 2006, they were eight times the size; by 2008, on the eve of the world’s financial collapse, 10 times.
It is hard to think of a European country more incompetently run in the past 20 years than Iceland. The credit crunch bankrupted the nation. Boyes reproduces in its entirety the chilling transcript of the telephone conversation between Britain’s chancellor, Alastair Darling, and his Icelandic counterpart, Arni Mathieson, as news broke that the Icelandic banks were intending to default on their obligations to their British customers. “We are in a very, very difficult situation,” wails Mathieson. “I can see that,” says Darling, before adding, in the quietly threatening manner of a mafia accountant who wants his boss’s money back: “You have to understand that the reputation of your country is going to be terrible.”
Learning hard lessons from Iceland – Russell Wangersky
Monday, March 16th, 2009RUSSELL WANGERSKY The Telegram "Maybe we can become a kind of museum of how not to do things." Jonina Benediktsdottir, Icelandic businesswoman, talking about Iceland's financial collapse with New Yorker writer ...
Kaupthing loan sheet released, then covered up again
Tuesday, August 4th, 2009Despite the old bank’s collapse and the perceived new appetite for transparency, Kaupthing lawyers were not at all happy and threatened the website with legal action; a threat which was laughed off.
They did, however, manage to stop RUV revealing the document on their evening television news with mere minutes until broadcast. The law is the law, so RUV complied with the order – skirting it effectively by simply showing the website address to the still-visible document on WikiLeaks.
Commentators on the IceNews forum have already posted the link and the document is easy to find from the site’s homepage. But in case you are having trouble, here it is with summary and news updates: http://www.wikileaks.com/wiki/Financial_collapse:_Confidential_exposure_analysis_of_205_companies_each_owing_above_EUR45M_to_
Icelandic_bank_Kaupthing%2C_26_Sep_2008
RUV decided to only partially comply with the injunction because: “The injunction was ordered by the Reykjavík District Commissioner, one Rúnar Guðjónsson. As it happens, the son of the Reykjavík District Commissioner, Guðjón Rúnarsson, is head of the Icelandic Financial Services Association and one of the top spokesmen for the failed banks. Among other things, he has fought to have the state’s Housing Financing Fund [which supplies the general public with affordable mortgages] abolished so that the banks could have exclusive dibs on the mortgage market,” quoting directly from WikiLeaks.
The nicely-presented Kaupthing document details loans to 205 individuals and organisations, each for 45 to 1,250 million euros.
Many of the loans are unsecured and/or were paid out to bank insiders. It seems whole companies were set up simply to borrow money to buy shares in other companies owned by the same owners. The loans were, of course, secured with the shares themselves – most of which are practically worthless now.
This news only adds fuel to the flames created by other recent revelations (see here for the last Kaupthing scandal). Back in May IceNews also published this article which takes on a whole new flavour following the release of the WikiLeaks document.
The bank’s point-of-view is that the document should remain secret to protect the secrecy of the bank’s customers – an important guarantee all customers should be able to take for granted.
Tags: 2c, Appetite, Bank Insiders, Commentators, Dibs, District Commissioner, Document Details, Evening Television, Exposure Analysis, Financial Collapse, Injunction, Kaupthing, Last Autumn, Lock And Key, Mortgage Market, News Updates, Spokesmen, Television News, Transparency, Website Address
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