THE PRESIDENT OF ICELAND TELLS HOW
HE HAD THE BALLS TO STAND UP TO BRITAIN
By Adam
Taylor
Via Business
Insider
The president of Iceland sits in his
study drinking tea from an immaculate china set.
“If a collapse in the financial
sector can bring one of the most stable and secure democracies and political
structures to his knees as happened in Iceland,” Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson says to
me, “then what could it do in countries that have less stable democratic and
political history?”
The tiny country is unique not only
in its stunning geography but also in its open democracy. This democracy was
pivotal in the choice to let three giant banks fail during the financial
crisis.
For Ólafur, the crisis of 2008 was
personal. Once the darling of the left wing, he worked as finance minister for
several years before he became president of the country in 1996, a largely
ceremonial role that he’s inhabited ever since. Like many in the country he was
once a cheerleader for Iceland’s financial sector, privatized at the start of
the 21st century — and the sudden collapse was a painful reminder that Iceland
was a small, isolated place.
Now, of course, most headlines we
see about Iceland seem positive. Iceland is repaying its IMF loans early, unemployment is down, and growth is above average. The streets of Reykjavik
seem calm and happy.
Other countries, of course, haven’t
been so lucky. The crisis remains front page news in Greece, Italy and Spain —
countries that followed a very different response from Iceland’s.
Ólafur argues that his country’s
strength came from recognizing the problem was not just an “economic and
financial challenge”, but a “profound social, political, and even judicial”
challenge.
After the crisis, the country held a full judicial
investigation, and went against “the prevailing economic orthodoxies of the
American, European and IMF model.”
Ólafur says that he likes to think that the IMF learned more from Iceland
during this time than vice versa.
A key example of this approach is Iceland’s
refusal to pump money into failed banks. The decision was controversial at the
time, but now looks increasingly wise. “I have never understood the argument —
why a private bank or financial fund is somehow better for the well being and
future of the economy than the industrial sector, the IT sector, the creative
sector, or the manufacturing sector”.
There is, of course, another aspect.
A tricky situation arose when the U.K. and Holland demanded money for their
citizens’ depleted Icesave accounts, and Iceland refused. The incident sparked
a major diplomatic scuffle, with Iceland refusing to pay out and the U.K. even
using “anti-terrorism legislation” against the state.
For Ólafur, it’s also a personal
aspect. He was head of state, though he did not control the government — in
effect his position was more like being an elected Queen of England than being
Barack Obama. But constitutionally he had the right to veto government
legislation — though it had never been used by his office previously.
Ólafur decided to block government
legislation to pay back the U.K. Twice. Both times the legislation went
to a nationwide vote, and failed.
“It was absolutely very tough
indeed,” Ólafur says. “Every big financial institution, both in Europe and in
my own country was against me, and there were powerful forces, both in Iceland
and Europe, that thought my decision was absolutely crazy.”
The decision was hugely
controversial, and remains a sore spot in relations. For him, it was a matter
of history. “What is our primary legacy to countries and nations in modern
times?” He says, “Europe is and should be more about democracy than about
financial markets. Based with this choice, it was in the end, clear that I had
to choose democracy.”
He also blames the British for their role,
specifically Gordon Brown, by whom he believes Iceland is owed an apology.
Ólafur likens the situation to the Falklands war, adding it was a “great
offense” that “one of the most peace-loving countries in the world, a founding
member of NATO, a strong ally of Britain during the Second World War was put
together with al-Qaeda and the Taliban on the official list of terrorist
organizations.”
Iceland essentially had no choice,
Ólafur says.
“If you take the relative size of
the Icelandic economy and the British economy,” he explains, “and you transfer
over to the British economy the sum that the British government was asking the
Icelandic taxpayers to be responsible for due to the failure of this private
bank, it would have been equal [...] to asking the British taxpayer to be
responsible for an £800 billion bill [$1,275 billion] for a failed British bank
in Spain and Italy and Greece.”
To Ólafur’s credit, the Icesave
debts are likely to be settled soon, using money from the estate of Landsbanki.
He believes that if the U.K. and Holland had waited a while longer there would
have been no conflict.
After 2008, Icelandic relations with
Europe may have been strained. It was during a dinner with foreign diplomats
that year that Ólafur reportedly said “The North Atlantic is important to Scandinavia, the U.S.
and Britain. This is a fact these countries now seem to ignore. Then, Iceland
should rather get some new friends.”
Ólafur dismisses the quote, going on
to say that his problem isn’t Europe, but the
European and American banking system. He says Iceland’s lesson is that “If
you want your economy to excel in the 21st century a big banking sector, even a very successful
banking sector, is bad news.”
“You could even argue that the
bigger the banking sector is, the worse the news is for your economy,” he adds,
later blaming the huge growth of Iceland’s banking sector on the prevailing
European banking philosophy and incompetent rating agencies.
Instead, the country is hoping to
use not only its creative and intellectual capital, now freed from the finance
industry, but also its unique geographical situation.
“The Arctic has become one of the
most crucial regions for the future of the world, both in terms of economy,
trade and climate and health,” he says, adding that he feels Iceland, a member
of the Arctic Council, has a ten year head-start on the issue, which is now
attracting the interest of the EU, China and South Korea — countries with no
geographical claim on the area.
This future is something that Ólafur
clearly sees himself as a part of. He had originally told the country that he
would not run for president again — he had been in office for 16 years and felt
he could work better without the day-to-day stress.
However, after an online petition circulating managed to get 30,000
signatures last month, Ólafur decided to run for a fifth term. The
elections will be held in June.
While other candidates have come
forward, that 15 percent of the population who have already signed up would
likely give Ólafur reason to believe he will win. He says it was the “public
will” of Iceland that caused him to change his mind. “If a large part of the
nation wants me to continue, I will bow to that public will,” he says.
“But if that turns out to not be the
case, that’s also fine with me.”
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