After reading about the Cod Wars (best part was "Not to be confused with the Cold War."), I'm proud of the plucky Icelandic Navy defying the Royal Navy. Must have been pretty humiliating to be British back then. Heck, it must be pretty humiliating to be British today.
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Iceland stares into Icesave abyss
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Originally posted by Felch View PostAfter reading about the Cod Wars (best part was "Not to be confused with the Cold War."), I'm proud of the plucky Icelandic Navy defying the Royal Navy. Must have been pretty humiliating to be British back then. Heck, it must be pretty humiliating to be British today.One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.
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Originally posted by notyoueither View PostYou mean the loans from the Netherlands and the UK that were used to reimburse depositors in those countries?
Those are a bit dodgy, aren't they?
As Dauphin pointed out, it looks like there may have been massive frauds committed by the bank directors.
However, even if that hadn't been the case, you're still left with a loan accepted by the Icelandic government which they're now trying to avoid repaying. Bear in mind that Iceland has also had massive loans by Scandinavian nations, the IMF and Russia- would you lend money to a defaulter?The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland
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Originally posted by Felch View PostAfter reading about the Cod Wars (best part was "Not to be confused with the Cold War."), I'm proud of the plucky Icelandic Navy defying the Royal Navy. Must have been pretty humiliating to be British back then. Heck, it must be pretty humiliating to be British today.
It's easy to be philosophical about it now, when Iceland is doing the sovereign nation equivalent of sucking penises for pennies.The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland
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I'm buying a ticket to Iceland, ASAP. Just pennies??
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Originally posted by germanos View PostIceland is part of some sort of European Economic Zone (No, not the EU). Subsequently Icelandic banks can do business in other memberstates as long as they have a licence from the Icelandic Central Bank. Icesave had such a licence. The central bank guarantees deposits at such licenced banks up to 20K euro (per person (or account?) in case of a collapse of the bank.
The UK/NL bail out depositors in their countries including the 20K that fell on the Icelandic fund and make it clear they expect Iceland to pay them back. Meanwhile, Iceland's economy tanks and alst fall they pass a bill that agrees to take on the debt from the UK/NL depositors - basically, they assert their legal position in principle but in order to get IMF aid and fix their credit rating they cave. The bill had a number of caveats, like the payments can't exceed a certain fraction of Iceland's GDP (necessary because the debt is nominated in euros), and I believe it had a couple of years grace before payments would start. Now, the UK/NL finds the caveats unacceptable. This prompts another bill without them that narrowly passes the Icelanic parliament in december.
The exact amount to be paid is subject to uncertainty depending on how much of Landsbanki's assets are recoverable, but has been estimated to average 1-1.5% of GDP for up to a decade, if nothing out of the ordinary happens in that time. The Icelandic public feels they have been tricked by their own corrupt politicians and bankers and by irresponsible mostly foreign investors into a Versailles-like treaty. Expect more domestic turmoil in Iceland...
Soon the Icelandic government collapsed, leading to new elections and the new parliament now wants to cancel the deal.
Originally posted by Bugs ****ing BunnyIceland, however, wants to play the "let's get out of safeguarding the foreign investors who have built our economy" game. If they do that, they'll avoid the bad austerity measures they'll have to take, but they'll be financial outcasts.
Defaulting would be the worst thing for Iceland, and I hope they are smarter than that. But there's nothing wrong with shaming Britain and Netherlands for their aggressive and ethically questionable behavior against a supposed ally.
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