▶ Creditors’ demands are seen as an attack on sovereignty.
By LANDON THOMAS Jr.
REYKJAVIK, Iceland - Just months after an epic banking collapse forced Iceland into the arms of the International Monetary Fund, this island nation is locked in a fierce debate over how to pay off its creditors without ceding too much of its vaunted independence.
The balance Iceland strikes between bowing to the policy demands of the global financial community and satisfying the desires of its increasingly resentful population of 300,000 will be closely watched as I.M.F. programs in beaten-down economies from Latvia and Ukraine to Hungary and Romania enter a crucial phase.
“When you impose austerity, it becomes very painful and comes at a cost,” said Simon Johnson, a former I.M.F. economist who now teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. But many Icelanders are blaming the I.M.F. and in this case, he says, that is not warranted.
“Iceland is a rich country that behaved recklessly and helped destabilize the world financial system,” Mr. Johnson said. “They will have to take their medicine.”
While those in Iceland’s left-leaning government will not put it so bluntly, that is broadly the case they are making. The first country to throw its government out of office as a result of the global financial crisis, Icelanders could see the government that replaced it topple too, leaving the country rudderless - unless it wins approval in the near future for a deal to repay Britain and the Netherlands the $5.7 billion loan it used to compensate foreign depositors for losses in Icelandic banks.
“This is an attack on our sovereignty,” said Ogmundur Jonasson, the country’s health minister. “It reminds me of old colonial times. Gordon Brown had no harsh words for the United States when Lehman Brothers went down and billions of pounds went to the U.S. That was friendship - this is ‘Take the little guy and nail him to the wall.’
To not pass the bill, the government says (most of it anyway), would lead to the I.M.F. and other outside lenders withdrawing funds, further jeopardizing the country’s fragile condition.
But detractors say passing it would increase Iceland’s debt burden to 200 percent of gross domestic product, making it one of the most leveraged nations in the world. Ultimately, they say, it could drive Iceland to default.
At the crux of this debate is the Icesave, or “Iceslave,” as it is called here. Icesave accounts were a top-ofthe- market gambit by Landsbanki, the most aggressive of the failed Icelandic banks, to raise cash by extending its branch network from tiny Reykjavik to the high streets of London. The reaction to the agreement to make good on the accounts encapsulates all the swelling anger that Icelanders now bear toward bankers, foreign creditors and I.M.F. technocrats.
Lilja Mosesdottir is an economist and a back-bench member of Parliament in the governing Left Green party. But if she were to vote now, she says, she would vote against the government bill. Ms. Mosesdottir, new to politics, swept into power this winter when the conservative party was overturned by the “pots and pans revolution.”
“It is like after a war and you are the loser,” she said, taking a quick coffee break from back-room negotiations over the deal. “This is an agreement that will lead to a sovereign default, and we don’t want that to happen.”
Such points are little comfort for many Icelanders whose personal debts have skyrocketed in the wake of the precipitous fall in Iceland’s currency, the krona.
Gunnar Sigurdsson, a theater director, says his car loan has doubled since the crisis began; his mortgage payments have jumped over 35 percent.
Personal bankruptcy is inevitable, he says, and he is now trying to make a documentary - training his camera on Iceland’s top politicians, bankers and, if he is lucky, Dominique Strauss- Kahn, the head of the I.M.F. “I have had enough of this stupidity,” he said. “I just want answers.”
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