A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises

Highlights 1) Iceland, Ireland and Latvia experienced similar developments before the crisis, such as sharp increases in banks’ balance sheets and the expansion of the construction sector. However the impact of the crisis was different: Latvia was hit harder than any other country in the world. Irel...

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Main Author: Zsolt Darvas
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://web.uni-corvinus.hu/matkg/working_papers/wp_2011_6_darvas.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:mkg:wpaper:1106 2024-04-14T08:13:25+00:00 A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises Zsolt Darvas http://web.uni-corvinus.hu/matkg/working_papers/wp_2011_6_darvas.pdf unknown http://web.uni-corvinus.hu/matkg/working_papers/wp_2011_6_darvas.pdf preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:25:39Z Highlights 1) Iceland, Ireland and Latvia experienced similar developments before the crisis, such as sharp increases in banks’ balance sheets and the expansion of the construction sector. However the impact of the crisis was different: Latvia was hit harder than any other country in the world. Ireland also suffered heavily, while Iceland came out from the crisis with the smallest fall in employment, despite the greatest shock to the financial system. 2) There were marked differences in policy mix: currency collapse in Iceland but not in Latvia, letting banks fail in Iceland but not in Ireland, and the introduction of strict capital controls only in Iceland. The speed of fiscal consolidation was fastest in Latvia and slowest in Ireland. 3) Economic recovery has started in all three countries and there are several encouraging signals. The programme targets in terms of fiscal adjustment, structural reforms and financial reform are on track in all three countries. 4) Iceland seems to have the right policy mix. 5) Internal devaluation in Ireland and Latvia through wage cuts did not work, because private-sector wages hardly changed. The productivity increase was significant in Ireland and moderate in Latvia, yet was the result of a greater fall in employment than the fall in output, with harmful social consequences. 6) The experience with the collapse of the gigantic Icelandic banking system suggests that letting banks fail when they had a faulty business model is the right choice. 7) There is a strong case for a European banking federation. banking crisis, banking sector restructuring, economic recovery, currency devaluation, internal devaluation, capital controls, fiscal adjustment Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description Highlights 1) Iceland, Ireland and Latvia experienced similar developments before the crisis, such as sharp increases in banks’ balance sheets and the expansion of the construction sector. However the impact of the crisis was different: Latvia was hit harder than any other country in the world. Ireland also suffered heavily, while Iceland came out from the crisis with the smallest fall in employment, despite the greatest shock to the financial system. 2) There were marked differences in policy mix: currency collapse in Iceland but not in Latvia, letting banks fail in Iceland but not in Ireland, and the introduction of strict capital controls only in Iceland. The speed of fiscal consolidation was fastest in Latvia and slowest in Ireland. 3) Economic recovery has started in all three countries and there are several encouraging signals. The programme targets in terms of fiscal adjustment, structural reforms and financial reform are on track in all three countries. 4) Iceland seems to have the right policy mix. 5) Internal devaluation in Ireland and Latvia through wage cuts did not work, because private-sector wages hardly changed. The productivity increase was significant in Ireland and moderate in Latvia, yet was the result of a greater fall in employment than the fall in output, with harmful social consequences. 6) The experience with the collapse of the gigantic Icelandic banking system suggests that letting banks fail when they had a faulty business model is the right choice. 7) There is a strong case for a European banking federation. banking crisis, banking sector restructuring, economic recovery, currency devaluation, internal devaluation, capital controls, fiscal adjustment
format Report
author Zsolt Darvas
spellingShingle Zsolt Darvas
A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises
author_facet Zsolt Darvas
author_sort Zsolt Darvas
title A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises
title_short A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises
title_full A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises
title_fullStr A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises
title_full_unstemmed A Tale of Three Countries: Recovery after Banking Crises
title_sort tale of three countries: recovery after banking crises
url http://web.uni-corvinus.hu/matkg/working_papers/wp_2011_6_darvas.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://web.uni-corvinus.hu/matkg/working_papers/wp_2011_6_darvas.pdf
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