Iceland's meltdown: the rise and fall of international banking in the North Atlantic

Wade, Robert HunterORCID logo; and Sigurgeirsdottir, Silla (2011) Iceland's meltdown: the rise and fall of international banking in the North Atlantic Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, 31 (5). pp. 684-697. ISSN 0101-3157
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This paper shows how rapid privatization and liberalization of Iceland's small local banks around 2000, combined with well-developed crony relations among the elite, enabled a small group of financiers to leverage government-guaranteed deposits into a vast wave of mergers and acquisitions abroad, and redistribute enough of the profits back home to make the economy boom. Negative policy feedback loops were systematically undermined. The incoming left-wing government, with IMF support, has managed to protect the bulk of the population from the worst of the effects.

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