The Dutch disease in reverse: Iceland's natural experiment

Abundant natural resources brought Iceland a systemically overvalued currency, with adverse effects on the secondary tradable sector. During 2003-2008 another national treasure, the sovereign's AAA rating, was used to attract foreign capital, elevating the real exchange rate even further. The f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gylfason, T, Zoega, G
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: University of Oxford 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:292ffa98-285e-4cf7-9a7e-d45d14e12656
Description
Summary:Abundant natural resources brought Iceland a systemically overvalued currency, with adverse effects on the secondary tradable sector. During 2003-2008 another national treasure, the sovereign's AAA rating, was used to attract foreign capital, elevating the real exchange rate even further. The financial collapse in 2008 left the country with a large foreign debt without the possibility of rollovers in international capital markets. This offset some of the effect of the natural resources on the real exchange rate; in effect, this was the Dutch disease in reverse as witnessed, in particular, by a massive increase in the number of tourists in recent years.