Iceland ’s president veto’s IceSave law

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Fri Jan 8 10:00:29 CET 2010


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

Iceland’s president veto’s IceSave law
By Jordan Shilton
8 January 2010

Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, Iceland’s president, announced Tuesday that he
would not sign into law the Icesave bill, which stipulates terms for
the repayment of loans to Britain and the Netherlands. Instead, a
referendum will be held on the matter, with polls indicating that a
substantial majority of Icelanders will reject the latest version of
the measure.

The move provoked a furious response in international financial
circles. Fitch immediately downgraded Iceland’s long-term debt rating
to junk status. British reaction was especially aggressive, with the
Times reporting that the Treasury may consider seizing the remainder
of Landsbanki’s UK-based assets. Jeremy Warner began his comments in
the Telegraph, “Right, that’s it. They are definitely not going to be
allowed into the European Union now. In fact they will be lucky if we
don’t set the gunboats on them.”

Such responses typify the determination of the ruling elite that
working people must be made to pay for the financial crisis. Any
challenge to this diktat is met with fury, contempt and threats of
ever-greater financial penalties against the population of the
“offending” country.

British commentators have also rushed to blame the entire population
of Iceland for the financial collapse, claiming that everyone chose to
benefit from the vast expansion of the banking system. The Guardian
wrote, “Icelanders were happy to take the profits in the boom years.”

The fact that the decisions that helped precipitate the crisis were
taken by a handful of international speculators, entirely insulated
from the concerns and opinions of the working class, is ignored by
these commentators.

In this way, the financial oligarchy and their political mouthpieces
in the media seek to divert attention from the real causes of the
crisis, and the billions that have been spent bailing out the
financial institutions. As the novelist Einars Már Gudmundsson
commented, “We were told that what these banks did abroad was nothing
to do with us, but when it all went wrong the responsibility fell back
on us. Profits were privatised, but losses were nationalised.”

The IceSave dispute was caused by the collapse of Landsbanki at the
end of 2008 following the sub-prime mortgage crisis in the United
States and the resulting “credit crunch.”

IceSave was an online savings service Landsbanki provided to
depositors in the UK and the Netherlands, attracting roughly 300,000
British and 100,000 Dutch savers. With Iceland’s major banks having
collapsed and the state facing bankruptcy, London and Amsterdam repaid
a total of £3.4 billion (€3.8 billion) to IceSave depositors. Ever
since, negotiations have been ongoing with Britain and the Netherlands
seeking full repayment of the funds from Reykjavik.

Grímsson’s move came after months of lengthy debate within the
Althingi (parliament), which narrowly approved the latest version of
the bill on December 30. An earlier version of the legislation, which
was overwhelmingly backed by parliament and approved by Grímsson in
August, would have limited repayments to 6 percent of GDP and would
have also allowed Iceland to challenge the settlement in a court of law.

Britain and the Netherlands rejected the repayment cap, demanding even
stricter terms with complete disregard for the consequences. That it
is their rapacious demands that triggered the crisis is also passed
over in the international media, which has been quick to present the
situation as proof that Iceland is reneging on its obligations.

The latest bill requires that Iceland repay the entire sum by 2024, at
an interest rate of 5.5 percent. Interest will be frozen for the first
seven years (until 2016), but will then run until repayment has been
completed. According to estimates, repayments could rise as high as
€400 million by 2020/2021. In total, the amount to be repaid is
equivalent to €12,000 for every Icelander, or €44,000 for every family.

The terms have been likened to the Versailles Treaty imposed on
Germany after World War I. Icelanders have shown their opposition to
repaying debts on such terms when they were incurred by privately
owned banks engaged in rampant speculation. Nearly 50,000
people—almost one quarter of the adult population—signed a petition
urging the president to send the bill to a referendum.

The petition was organised by the InDefense group, which was formed at
the end of 2008 to oppose the use of the anti-terrorism act by Britain
against Kaupthing and Landsbanki assets. The group, which is presented
in the media as a grassroots organisation, is based on Icelandic
nationalism and focuses its campaigns on upholding Iceland’s standing
within the “international community.”

Progressive party leader Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson was involved in
its initial formation, until he was elected to parliament last April.
The Progressives are a right-wing party, which sat in a coalition with
the Independence party for more than a decade from the mid-1990s until
2007. It was during this period that Iceland’s banking system was
privatised and deregulated, which played a significant role in its
collapse.

Polls indicate that the referendum will see the IceSave bill rejected.
In an online poll conducted in December with more than 7,000
participants, 69 percent stated that they opposed Iceland being fully
responsible for compensating IceSave depositors.

Independent assessments of the events of 2008 have supported the
argument that it should not only be Iceland receiving the blame for
the bank’s failure. A recent study by Sweden’s central bank (Riksbank)
noted the lack of regulation by the British government on IceSave
operations, concluding that the UK should assume some of the financial
burden as a result.

Britain has been quick to dismiss such a suggestion, insisting that
Iceland meet its international obligations. London responded tersely
to the announcement that the IceSave legislation had not been
accepted, with Treasury officials threatening Reykjavik with isolation.

Lord Myners, Britain’s minister for financial services, declared that
Iceland’s relationship with the EU and the IMF was on the line,
implying that Britain would use its influence to block future
financial support and EU membership. Myners stated, “I don’t think
it’s a case of us having to warn them. The Icelandic government
recognised that this was the case.”

Suspicions regarding British influence within the IMF being used to
hold up the second part of Iceland’s US$2.1 billion (€1.46 billion)
loan were expressed earlier in 2009. Though the IMF agreed to release
the second installment of the loan in October, this amounted to little
more than US$150 million and will be quickly absorbed. There remain
seven further installments yet to be approved, and a further US$2.5
billion support package from the Nordic countries is also being
dispersed in installments.

Finland made statements to the effect that the next installment of its
loan would be placed in jeopardy in the event of a “no” vote in the
referendum. Norway has confirmed that the next installment of its
support will be withheld until after the referendum. The loss of
financial support upon which the government is depending will once
again raise the spectre of state bankruptcy.

This will further destabilise the coalition government. Roger Boyes,
writing in the Times, described Iceland as a society which was
becoming “ungovernable.” Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardóttir, leader
of the Social Democrats, reportedly commented after the president’s
announcement that her coalition may not survive a referendum.

Sigurdardóttir’s government does not only confront debts from IceSave.
The £3.4 billion sum is a small portion of Iceland’s much larger
public debt, which, according to a recent IMF assessment, could reach
300 percent of GDP. Should Iceland accept full responsibility for the
compensation of Britain and the Netherlands, its public debt could
increase by between 20 and 40 percent of GDP. During the 2008 crisis,
the IMF warned that such levels of public debt would be unsustainable.

The government has already spent billions of euros recapitalising the
failed banks, two of which have already been returned to private hands
to recommence their speculative activities. At the same time, it has
launched a massive attack on public spending in order to fund the
bailout of the financial elite.

While working people in Iceland must reject the idea that they should
pay for the speculative activities of a criminal financial oligarchy,
a “no” vote in the referendum is an insufficient response to the
current crisis. The population will still confront vast reductions in
services and deep cuts in government spending, and the rejection of
the current version of IceSave will bring demands for even greater
penalties against the country.

Rejection of the IceSave bill must be part of a refusal by working
people to pay a single euro towards helping fund the economic crisis
caused by a reckless and criminal financial elite. This necessitates
the adoption of socialist policies as the only means of resolving the
dire circumstances facing working people, and a turn for support to
workers across Europe who are in similar circumstances.

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/jan2010/icel-j08.shtml

**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********



More information about the D66 mailing list