Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises

Despite having lived through some of history’s greatest financial and economic crises, the two small open economies of Iceland and Ireland are now enjoying relatively high growth rates and declining unemployment, and are broadly regarded as success stories of effective economic turnarounds. In both...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carstensen, Martin B.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Institut for Statskundskab ved Aarhus Universitet og Syddansk Universitet 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/politica/article/view/131392
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spelling ftkbcopenhojs:oai:ojs.tidsskrift.dk:article/131392 2023-05-15T16:49:23+02:00 Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises Carstensen, Martin B. 2016-09-01 https://tidsskrift.dk/politica/article/view/131392 unknown Institut for Statskundskab ved Aarhus Universitet og Syddansk Universitet https://tidsskrift.dk/politica/article/view/131392 http://politica.dk/ Politica; Årg. 48 Nr. 3 (2016): Politisk-økonomisk regulering efter finanskrisen Politica. Tidsskrift for politisk videnskab; Vol. 48 No. 3 (2016): Politisk-økonomisk regulering efter finanskrisen 2246-042X 0105-0710 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2016 ftkbcopenhojs 2022-03-02T23:49:54Z Despite having lived through some of history’s greatest financial and economic crises, the two small open economies of Iceland and Ireland are now enjoying relatively high growth rates and declining unemployment, and are broadly regarded as success stories of effective economic turnarounds. In both countries, policy focused on restoring the confidence of international capital markets, but whereas Icelandic crisis management has compensated the people worst hit by the crisis through socially balanced austerity and debt cancellation, Ireland’s austerity followed a more orthodox, European approach with significant inequality-creating effects. Iceland’s heterodox approach was made possible through capital controls and a devaluation of the currency, while Ireland could neither devalue nor write down bank debt. The article shows how the dependence on international capital markets and the abandonment of independent monetary policy restrict the flexibility small states have previously enjoyed and increase dependence on fortunate developments in the world economy. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Tidsskrift.dk (The Royal Library, Denmark)
institution Open Polar
collection Tidsskrift.dk (The Royal Library, Denmark)
op_collection_id ftkbcopenhojs
language unknown
description Despite having lived through some of history’s greatest financial and economic crises, the two small open economies of Iceland and Ireland are now enjoying relatively high growth rates and declining unemployment, and are broadly regarded as success stories of effective economic turnarounds. In both countries, policy focused on restoring the confidence of international capital markets, but whereas Icelandic crisis management has compensated the people worst hit by the crisis through socially balanced austerity and debt cancellation, Ireland’s austerity followed a more orthodox, European approach with significant inequality-creating effects. Iceland’s heterodox approach was made possible through capital controls and a devaluation of the currency, while Ireland could neither devalue nor write down bank debt. The article shows how the dependence on international capital markets and the abandonment of independent monetary policy restrict the flexibility small states have previously enjoyed and increase dependence on fortunate developments in the world economy.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Carstensen, Martin B.
spellingShingle Carstensen, Martin B.
Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises
author_facet Carstensen, Martin B.
author_sort Carstensen, Martin B.
title Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises
title_short Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises
title_full Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises
title_fullStr Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises
title_full_unstemmed Small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in Ireland’s and Iceland’s financial crises
title_sort small states in the perfect storm: crisis management and economic credibility in ireland’s and iceland’s financial crises
publisher Institut for Statskundskab ved Aarhus Universitet og Syddansk Universitet
publishDate 2016
url https://tidsskrift.dk/politica/article/view/131392
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Politica; Årg. 48 Nr. 3 (2016): Politisk-økonomisk regulering efter finanskrisen
Politica. Tidsskrift for politisk videnskab; Vol. 48 No. 3 (2016): Politisk-økonomisk regulering efter finanskrisen
2246-042X
0105-0710
op_relation https://tidsskrift.dk/politica/article/view/131392
op_rights http://politica.dk/
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