Iceland; Selected Issues Paper

In this study, during 2008, the financial crisis lead Iceland’s public debt to soar from under 30 percent of GDP to more than 100 percent of GDP, and while underlying external debt came down sharply, it remains elevated at close to 300 percent of GDP. First, external sustainability is overviewed, an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: International Monetary Fund
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.aspx?sk=24255
Description
Summary:In this study, during 2008, the financial crisis lead Iceland’s public debt to soar from under 30 percent of GDP to more than 100 percent of GDP, and while underlying external debt came down sharply, it remains elevated at close to 300 percent of GDP. First, external sustainability is overviewed, and second, growth of Iceland’s economy has been challenged, and finally, fiscal adjustments and its macroeconomic impacts are overviewed. Traditional external debt sustainability analysis (DSA) suggests that Iceland’s external debt is sustainable but is vulnerable to depreciation shock. External sector;External debt;Economic models;Economic growth;Fiscal consolidation;Fiscal policy;Financial risk;Corporate sector;Debt sustainability;Iceland;Sovereign debt;Selected issues;debt, international monetary fund, interest