Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?

Indexation of credit to inflation (ex-post) is a unique legal practice in Iceland based on valorism theory on money vs. nominalism. Two rulings issued in 2014 by the EFTA Court try to clarify the legality and fairness of this particular price-variation clause under the European Economic Area consume...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: M. Elvira Mendez-Pinedo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An6v2/1%20Mendez.pdf
id ftrepec:oai:RePEc:asr:journl:v:6:y:2016:i:special:p:7-39
record_format openpolar
spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:asr:journl:v:6:y:2016:i:special:p:7-39 2024-04-14T08:13:31+00:00 Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction? M. Elvira Mendez-Pinedo http://tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An6v2/1%20Mendez.pdf unknown http://tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An6v2/1%20Mendez.pdf article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:36:56Z Indexation of credit to inflation (ex-post) is a unique legal practice in Iceland based on valorism theory on money vs. nominalism. Two rulings issued in 2014 by the EFTA Court try to clarify the legality and fairness of this particular price-variation clause under the European Economic Area consumer credit acquis. The study summarizes the rulings and analyses critically the interpretation provided by the court. It argues that the judgements defy the logic of non-contradiction since indexation of credit proves to be an impossible oxymoron under EU/EEA law. The results are confusing. On one hand, cost of credit and usury practices tend to fall outside the scope of European harmonisation (provided disclosure obligation of cost of credit and transparency ex-ante are respected). A fairness control is thus dependent on national and case circumstances to be assessed by domestic courts. On the other hand, European rules also impose with no derogations that the cost of indexation of credit to inflation is disclosed in a transparent way and calculated ex-ante. The paradox is there. Since indexation of credit operates ex-post on the basis of real inflation, it is impossible to disclose ex-ante in a transparent way. The findings of the study help to understand the situation of impasse in Iceland. Without a clear interpretation from the EFTA Court, the saga has continued at national level and will probably head for a second round of assessment at European level. EFTA Court; Iceland; indexation of credit; fairness; information and transparency; consumer protection. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Indexation of credit to inflation (ex-post) is a unique legal practice in Iceland based on valorism theory on money vs. nominalism. Two rulings issued in 2014 by the EFTA Court try to clarify the legality and fairness of this particular price-variation clause under the European Economic Area consumer credit acquis. The study summarizes the rulings and analyses critically the interpretation provided by the court. It argues that the judgements defy the logic of non-contradiction since indexation of credit proves to be an impossible oxymoron under EU/EEA law. The results are confusing. On one hand, cost of credit and usury practices tend to fall outside the scope of European harmonisation (provided disclosure obligation of cost of credit and transparency ex-ante are respected). A fairness control is thus dependent on national and case circumstances to be assessed by domestic courts. On the other hand, European rules also impose with no derogations that the cost of indexation of credit to inflation is disclosed in a transparent way and calculated ex-ante. The paradox is there. Since indexation of credit operates ex-post on the basis of real inflation, it is impossible to disclose ex-ante in a transparent way. The findings of the study help to understand the situation of impasse in Iceland. Without a clear interpretation from the EFTA Court, the saga has continued at national level and will probably head for a second round of assessment at European level. EFTA Court; Iceland; indexation of credit; fairness; information and transparency; consumer protection.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author M. Elvira Mendez-Pinedo
spellingShingle M. Elvira Mendez-Pinedo
Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?
author_facet M. Elvira Mendez-Pinedo
author_sort M. Elvira Mendez-Pinedo
title Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?
title_short Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?
title_full Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?
title_fullStr Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?
title_full_unstemmed Iceland, the EFTA Court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. A law of contradiction?
title_sort iceland, the efta court and the indexation of credit to inflation: operating in nature ex-post but need to calculate and disclose ex-ante. a law of contradiction?
url http://tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An6v2/1%20Mendez.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An6v2/1%20Mendez.pdf
_version_ 1796311525629100032