Community | April 10, 2011 | 20 comments

Iceland rejects Icesave debt repayment to Britain and Netherlands once more

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Schnookums
Icelanders rejected for a second time a plan to repay $5 billion to Britain and the Netherlands from a bank crash, results showed on Sunday, and the prime minister said economic and political chaos could follow.

Policymakers have said a 'no' in the Saturday referendum meant the dispute will end up in a European court. Economists have said the uncertainty is hurting efforts to drag Iceland out of recession, end currency controls and boost investment.

"The worst option was chosen. The vote has split the nation in two," Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir told state television, saying it was fairly clear the "no" side had won.

State television said almost 60 per cent of voters had rejected the agreement, based on results from five out of six voting districts, including capital Reykjavik. Many voters were against taxpayers footing the bill for irresponsible bankers.

Just over 169,000 votes had been counted out of the 230,000 eligible voters.

The prime minister, who had predicted a no vote would cause economic uncertainty for at least a year or two, did not say whether the government planned to resign.

"We must do all we can to prevent political and economic chaos as a result of this outcome," she said.

The debt was incurred when Britain and the Netherlands compensated their nationals who lost savings in online "Icesave" accounts owned by Landsbanki, one of three Icelandic banks that collapsed in late 2008.

Sigurdardottir said Iceland would now defend its case before the court of the European trade body overseeing Iceland's co-operation with the EU, the EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA). Economists have said this route could be much costlier.

Economic Affairs Minister Arni Arnasson told the television he would be in touch next week with ESA, which said last year, in a first stage in legal proceedings, that Iceland should pay compensation to Icesave depositors.

Icelandic lawmakers in February backed a repayment plan agreed with creditors, but the president refused to sign the bill, triggering the vote. In March 2010, Iceland rejected an earlier Icesave repayment blueprint in a referendum.

"I know this will probably hurt us internationally, but it is worth taking a stance," Thorgerdun Asgeirsdottir, a 28-year-old barista, said after casting a "no" vote.

Svanhvit Ingibergs, 33, who works at a rest home, said: "I had no part in causing those debts, and I don't want our children to risk having to pay them. It would be better to settle this in a court."

Iceland is still pulling itself out of the recession which hit it after its bank crash, and policymakers and economists have said solving the Icesave issue would help the country get back into international financial markets.

Getting such funding is also part of a plan to end the controls on capital flows it imposed in 2008 to stabilize a tumbling currency.

The controls have left an estimated equivalent to a quarter of Iceland's gross domestic product in the hands of foreign investors, many of whom are expected to want to pull out. Ratings agencies follow the vote closely. Moody's has said it may lower its credit rating on Iceland in case of a 'no'.

Standard & Poor's analyst Elieen Zhang said a 'no' vote "might possibly result in a lengthy legal process and further uncertainties regarding the ultimate fiscal cost."





http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Iceland+rejects+Icesave+debt+repayment+Brit...
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20 comments // Iceland rejects Icesave debt repayment to Britain and Netherlands once more

  • UrbanGypsy
    • +1
      UrbanGypsy  
    • This might actually be very bad for Iceland - it could trigger something similar to what happened in Greece when investors pulled out after the country's credit rating dropped amidst doubts that the government couldn't repay its debt.

      The people voted for something that felt good and right - maybe without understanding all the consequences. Foreign investors control a quarter of Iceland's GDP and they may want to make a run for it once the country's rating drops - which can have bad consequences.

      I hope Icelanders know what they are doing and I hope they can settle it in the courts - because this has the potential to have very bad consequences for the country.

    • 1 year ago
  • Schnookums
  • UrbanGypsy
  • Schnookums
    • +2
      Schnookums  
    • UrbanGypsy:

      In the end it will be up to them, but it is plausible that given the choice of returning to a Iceland more like their grandparents or mortgaging their future to pay for their private bank's fuck-ups just to earn the 'right' to become part of the European Union, ceding their own sovereignty to the moneyed interests on the continent........they may very well vote for a third time to tell the international bankers to shove it up their asses.

    • 1 year ago
  • ptr23
    • +3
      ptr23  
    • That's great that the citizens of Iceland are making a stand and trying to get a little bit of accountability and not put their children in debt that isn't theirs.

    • 1 year ago
  • artemis6
    • +3
      artemis6  
    • I feel like Dorothy , in The Wizard of Oz , When Toto got away from the wicked witch ..... " He got away , he got away ..... " I hope Iceland gets free of them.

    • 1 year ago
  • artemis6
  • gump
    • +6
      gump  
    • F the banksters. The entire thing was a preplaned attack on the human population there just like it was all over the globe. And by the same elite .

    • 1 year ago
  • Dagum
    • +5
      Dagum  
    • Good for Iceland. I can imagine when the time comes our sniveling politicians are going to bend over backwards to force the American people to repay the international bankers, gambling debts they created.

    • 1 year ago
  • gump
    • +1
      gump  
    • Dagum:

      They were not gambling on a different possible outcome. This is what they wanted . They created this exactly . It was a full out congame on us . An attack of murder meant to crush populations much like Hitler crushed the population inside the warsaw getto. Some day they will demand the children and babies be handed over voluntarily. Better not wait till then to identify your adversaries.

    • 1 year ago
  • jubal
    • +6
      jubal  
    • America needs to take a lesson here. Our deficits and national debt are a direct cause of the banking bailouts in the trillions of dollars and the fact that we are in three wars now. We are literally bleeding billions out of our bottoms.

    • 1 year ago
  • Schnookums
  • MizPiz
  • gump
    • +3
      gump  
    • jubal:

      It was not our own people who launched this attack on our human population. It was a criminal ellite. What I call the bush crime family.

    • 1 year ago
  • BenjaminDover
    • +5
      BenjaminDover  
    • The people of Ice land have every right to say no to this. For foreign investors to expect the citizens of a nation to repay debt incurred by a privately owned bank is bullshit.

    • 1 year ago
  • jubal
  • MizPiz
  • Schnookums
    • +5
      Schnookums  
    • The "attractive offer" from Europe amounted to roughly $30,000 from each working age adult in Iceland to pay back foreign investors that lost big betting on a few bankers' promises. The only question I have is why the European governments are 'surprised' by the rejection.

    • 1 year ago
  • PressCore
    • +4
      PressCore  
    • Schnookums:

      Ex Tort ion: " To twist out " , as in, to twist another person/nation's arm to
      Coerce tribute to be paid, usualy conditioned upon a more grave threat
      of violence by abuse of economic and/or military force. Dat's vy dey call
      dem " Banksters " Nobama doesn't need their former NY Fed chairman,
      tax evader he is as, as Treasury secretary. Nobama needs a frontal lobotomy,
      though I'm sure it wouldn't cause him to carry on any differently anyway.
      But anyway or any other way, the only way to peacefuly impose the domino
      effect to collapse their Racketeering usery system is to stop making payments
      on the national debt and simply default. Let Federalist Alexander Hamilton
      roll in his grave, we'd have all been better off if Aron Burr shot him 10 years
      earlier than he did.

    • 1 year ago
  • PressCore
    • +3
      PressCore  
    • Schnookums:

      They're as mind controlled by the Banksters as the rest of Western Civ is.
      And why we're leaking like one. " Don't think about your troubles, just keep
      on blowing bubbles " You get the idea. Me, I intend to be a card carrying
      member of not only the Teamsters Union, but the Gold Prospector's Assn.
      of America as soon as I can. Cause I've got Goooolllldddd Fever, pardner !

    • 1 year ago
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