The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?

The Icelandic internet bank Icesave went bankrupt in late 2008. The insufficient Icelandic deposit guarantee scheme (Tryggingasjóður) did not resist the Icelandic financial meltdown and failed to compensate British and Dutch depositors the guaranteed sum of €20,887 as settled in Directive 94/19/EC,...

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Published in:Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
Main Author: Peter Orebech
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law 2010
Subjects:
eu
Law
K
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106
https://doaj.org/article/e3759daa6a3f4cd7826aed8abc425e9f
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:e3759daa6a3f4cd7826aed8abc425e9f 2023-05-15T16:47:13+02:00 The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown? Peter Orebech 2010-12-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106 https://doaj.org/article/e3759daa6a3f4cd7826aed8abc425e9f EN eng University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/106 https://doaj.org/toc/1845-5662 https://doaj.org/toc/1848-9958 doi:10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106 1845-5662 1848-9958 https://doaj.org/article/e3759daa6a3f4cd7826aed8abc425e9f Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy, Vol 6, Pp 127-152 (2010) iceland internet bank icesave european economic area agreement referendum eu directive 94/19/ec eu Law K Law of Europe KJ-KKZ article 2010 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106 2022-12-31T10:16:34Z The Icelandic internet bank Icesave went bankrupt in late 2008. The insufficient Icelandic deposit guarantee scheme (Tryggingasjóður) did not resist the Icelandic financial meltdown and failed to compensate British and Dutch depositors the guaranteed sum of €20,887 as settled in Directive 94/19/EC, which according to the European Economic Area Agreement (EEA) regulates the Icelandic financial sector. The British and Dutch deposit schemes paid out guarantees to their national Icesave depositors on behalf of the Icelandic scheme. Subsequently, an agreement was reached between Iceland, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. As part of the arrangement, the Icelandic government guaranteed the reimbursement of the British and Dutch bridging loan. The Icelandic referendum of 6 February 2010 rejected the agreement and the Icesave Act, which torpedoed the Icesave reimbursement plan. The EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA) issued a formal reprimand to Iceland. However, this has not been followed by any infringement proceedings as provided for by the EEA agreement. The author's position is that the ESA position results from a confusion of regulatory commitments with pecuniary liabilities. The key point is whether the Icelandic guarantee is in accordance with EU Directive 94/19/EC. The Directive requires the legislator to act. It is not a directive to force the government to pay (see Directive 94/19/EC Article 3.1.). This provision contributes to the implementation of the ban on Member States against guarantee schemes that distort competition. The schemes are self-financing and fully paid by the financial institutions. In the case of insufficient coverage, all depositors are subject to an equal pro rata reduction in compensation, as the scheme guarantee of full payment of the deposit guarantee sum of €20,887 is an objective to be reached within a reasonable time and not a legal right from day one. Government aid to top up the fund is prohibited, whether it is the intention or consequence. The Icelandic government cannot ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Rata ENVELOPE(19.216,19.216,69.928,69.928) Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy 6 6
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic iceland
internet bank icesave
european economic area agreement
referendum
eu directive 94/19/ec
eu
Law
K
Law of Europe
KJ-KKZ
spellingShingle iceland
internet bank icesave
european economic area agreement
referendum
eu directive 94/19/ec
eu
Law
K
Law of Europe
KJ-KKZ
Peter Orebech
The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?
topic_facet iceland
internet bank icesave
european economic area agreement
referendum
eu directive 94/19/ec
eu
Law
K
Law of Europe
KJ-KKZ
description The Icelandic internet bank Icesave went bankrupt in late 2008. The insufficient Icelandic deposit guarantee scheme (Tryggingasjóður) did not resist the Icelandic financial meltdown and failed to compensate British and Dutch depositors the guaranteed sum of €20,887 as settled in Directive 94/19/EC, which according to the European Economic Area Agreement (EEA) regulates the Icelandic financial sector. The British and Dutch deposit schemes paid out guarantees to their national Icesave depositors on behalf of the Icelandic scheme. Subsequently, an agreement was reached between Iceland, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. As part of the arrangement, the Icelandic government guaranteed the reimbursement of the British and Dutch bridging loan. The Icelandic referendum of 6 February 2010 rejected the agreement and the Icesave Act, which torpedoed the Icesave reimbursement plan. The EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA) issued a formal reprimand to Iceland. However, this has not been followed by any infringement proceedings as provided for by the EEA agreement. The author's position is that the ESA position results from a confusion of regulatory commitments with pecuniary liabilities. The key point is whether the Icelandic guarantee is in accordance with EU Directive 94/19/EC. The Directive requires the legislator to act. It is not a directive to force the government to pay (see Directive 94/19/EC Article 3.1.). This provision contributes to the implementation of the ban on Member States against guarantee schemes that distort competition. The schemes are self-financing and fully paid by the financial institutions. In the case of insufficient coverage, all depositors are subject to an equal pro rata reduction in compensation, as the scheme guarantee of full payment of the deposit guarantee sum of €20,887 is an objective to be reached within a reasonable time and not a legal right from day one. Government aid to top up the fund is prohibited, whether it is the intention or consequence. The Icelandic government cannot ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Peter Orebech
author_facet Peter Orebech
author_sort Peter Orebech
title The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?
title_short The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?
title_full The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?
title_fullStr The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?
title_full_unstemmed The Icesave bank of Iceland; from Rock-solid to Volcano Hot: Is the EU Deposit Guarantee Scheme Resisting Financial Meltdown?
title_sort icesave bank of iceland; from rock-solid to volcano hot: is the eu deposit guarantee scheme resisting financial meltdown?
publisher University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law
publishDate 2010
url https://doi.org/10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106
https://doaj.org/article/e3759daa6a3f4cd7826aed8abc425e9f
long_lat ENVELOPE(19.216,19.216,69.928,69.928)
geographic Rata
geographic_facet Rata
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy, Vol 6, Pp 127-152 (2010)
op_relation https://www.cyelp.com/index.php/cyelp/article/view/106
https://doaj.org/toc/1845-5662
https://doaj.org/toc/1848-9958
doi:10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106
1845-5662
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https://doaj.org/article/e3759daa6a3f4cd7826aed8abc425e9f
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3935/cyelp.06.2010.106
container_title Croatian Yearbook of European Law and Policy
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