REYKJAVIK - Three
years after Iceland's banks collapsed and the country teetered on the
brink, its economy is recovering, proof that governments should let
failing lenders go bust and protect taxpayers, analysts say.
The
North Atlantic island saw its three biggest banks go belly-up in the
October 2008 as its overstretched financial sector collapsed under the
weight of the global crisis sparked by the crash of US investment giant
Lehman Brothers.
The banks became insolvent within a matter of
weeks and Reykjavik was forced to let them fail and seek a $2.25 billion
bailout from the International Monetary Fund.
After three years
of harsh austerity measures, the country's economy is now showing signs
of health despite the current global financial and economic crisis that
has Greece verging on default and other eurozone states under pressure.
"The
lesson that could be learned from Iceland's way of handling its crisis
is that it is important to shield taxpayers and government finances from
bearing the cost of a financial crisis to the extent possible,"
Islandsbanki analyst Jon Bjarki Bentsson told AFP.
"Even if our
way of dealing with the crisis was not by choice but due to the
inability of the government to support the banks back in 2008 due to
their size relative to the economy, this has turned out relatively well
for us," Bentsson said.
Iceland's banking sector had assets worth 11 times the country's total gross domestic product (GDP) at their peak.
Nobel Prize-winning US economist Paul Krugman echoed Bentsson.
"Where
everyone else bailed out the bankers and made the public pay the price,
Iceland let the banks go bust and actually expanded its social safety
net," he wrote in a recent commentary in the New York Times.
"Where
everyone else was fixated on trying to placate international investors,
Iceland imposed temporary controls on the movement of capital to give
itself room to maneuver," he said.
During a visit to Reykjavik
last week, Krugman also said Iceland has the krona to thank for its
recovery, warning against the notion that adopting the euro can protect
against economic imbalances.
"Iceland's economic rebound shows
the advantages of being outside the euro. This notion that by joining
the euro you would be safe would come as news to the Spaniards," he
said, referring to one of the key eurozone states struggling to put its
public finances in order.
Iceland's example cannot be directly compared to the dramatic problems currently seen in Greece or Italy, however.
"The
big difference between Greece, Italy, etc at the moment and Iceland
back in 2008 is that the latter was a banking crisis caused by the
collapse of an oversized banking sector while the former is the result
of a sovereign debt crisis that has spilled over into the European
banking sector," Bentsson said.
"In Iceland, the government was actually in a sound position debt-wise before the crisis."
Iceland's
former prime minister Geir Haarde, in power during the 2008 meltdown
and currently facing trial over his handling of the crisis, has insisted
his government did the right thing early on by letting the banks fail
and making creditors carry the losses.
"We saved the country from going bankrupt," Haarde, 68, told AFP in an interview in July.
"That
is evident if you look at our situation now and you compare it to
Ireland or not to mention Greece," he said, adding that the two
debt-wracked EU countries "made mistakes that we did not make ... We did
not guarantee the external debts of the banking system."
Like
Ireland and Latvia, also rescued by international bailout packages and
now in recovery, Iceland implemented strict austerity measures and is
now reaping the fruits of its efforts.
So much so that its
central bank on Wednesday raised its key interest rate by a quarter
point to 4.75 percent, in sharp contrast to most other developed
countries which have slashed their borrowing costs amid the current
crises.
It said economic growth in the first half of 2011 was 2.5
percent and was forecast to be just over 3.0 percent for the year as a
whole.
David Stefansson, a research analyst at Arion Bank, told
AFP Iceland hiked its rates because it "is in a different place in the
economic (cycle) than other countries.
"The central bank thinks
that other central banks in similar circumstances can afford to keep
interest rates low, and even lower them, because expected inflation
abroad is in general quite (a bit) lower," he said.
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