Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling

In 2008 the three main banks in Iceland collapsed. The proximate cause was the freezing of the short-term international money markets, initiated by the subprime crisis, on which the Icelandic banks depended. However, concern about the Iceland banks and their rapid growth was expressed by, amongst ot...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Spreafico, Marta, Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10807/69389
id ftunicattolicair:oai:publicatt.unicatt.it:10807/69389
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunicattolicair:oai:publicatt.unicatt.it:10807/69389 2023-12-03T10:24:41+01:00 Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling Spreafico, Marta Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth Spreafico, Marta Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10807/69389 eng eng ispartofbook:Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy Working Papers issue:CCEPP WP07-14 firstpage:1 lastpage:37 numberofpages:37 issueyear:2014 journal:Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy Working Papers http://hdl.handle.net/10807/69389 2008 Banking Crisis financial regulation Iceland rating agencies role of economists Special Investigation Commission Settore SECS-P/02 - politica economica info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper 2014 ftunicattolicair 2023-11-07T23:29:16Z In 2008 the three main banks in Iceland collapsed. The proximate cause was the freezing of the short-term international money markets, initiated by the subprime crisis, on which the Icelandic banks depended. However, concern about the Iceland banks and their rapid growth was expressed by, amongst others, the international rating agencies and the IMF a couple of years earlier, causing a temporary mini-crisis. Moreover, there is strong evidence that the banks would have become insolvent even without the subprime crisis. The Icelandic parliamentary Special Investigation Commission came to the conclusion that 2006 was the last date by which the excessive growth of the banks could have been curtailed and the collapse possibly averted. Yet there was a marked difference in opinion at the time about the viability of the Icelandic banks. A clean bill of health was given by two influential reports by Mishkin and Portes, just prior to the collapse. However, severe reservations about the Icelandic financial system were expressed by Wade. These contrasting views were widely debated in the media and elsewhere and may well have influenced foreign potential and actual depositors in the banks. This paper analyses the disparate arguments put forward and contrasts it with the actual outcome. It considers the influence of economists in public policy debates and draws some methodological conclusions. Report Iceland Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore: PubliCatt
institution Open Polar
collection Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore: PubliCatt
op_collection_id ftunicattolicair
language English
topic 2008 Banking Crisis
financial regulation
Iceland
rating agencies
role of economists
Special Investigation Commission
Settore SECS-P/02 - politica economica
spellingShingle 2008 Banking Crisis
financial regulation
Iceland
rating agencies
role of economists
Special Investigation Commission
Settore SECS-P/02 - politica economica
Spreafico, Marta
Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth
Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling
topic_facet 2008 Banking Crisis
financial regulation
Iceland
rating agencies
role of economists
Special Investigation Commission
Settore SECS-P/02 - politica economica
description In 2008 the three main banks in Iceland collapsed. The proximate cause was the freezing of the short-term international money markets, initiated by the subprime crisis, on which the Icelandic banks depended. However, concern about the Iceland banks and their rapid growth was expressed by, amongst others, the international rating agencies and the IMF a couple of years earlier, causing a temporary mini-crisis. Moreover, there is strong evidence that the banks would have become insolvent even without the subprime crisis. The Icelandic parliamentary Special Investigation Commission came to the conclusion that 2006 was the last date by which the excessive growth of the banks could have been curtailed and the collapse possibly averted. Yet there was a marked difference in opinion at the time about the viability of the Icelandic banks. A clean bill of health was given by two influential reports by Mishkin and Portes, just prior to the collapse. However, severe reservations about the Icelandic financial system were expressed by Wade. These contrasting views were widely debated in the media and elsewhere and may well have influenced foreign potential and actual depositors in the banks. This paper analyses the disparate arguments put forward and contrasts it with the actual outcome. It considers the influence of economists in public policy debates and draws some methodological conclusions.
author2 Spreafico, Marta
Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth
format Report
author Spreafico, Marta
Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth
author_facet Spreafico, Marta
Mccombie, John Stuart Landreth
author_sort Spreafico, Marta
title Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling
title_short Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling
title_full Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling
title_fullStr Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling
title_full_unstemmed Could the Icelandic Banking Collapse of 2008 have been Prevented? The Role of Economists in its Unfurling
title_sort could the icelandic banking collapse of 2008 have been prevented? the role of economists in its unfurling
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10807/69389
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation ispartofbook:Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy Working Papers
issue:CCEPP WP07-14
firstpage:1
lastpage:37
numberofpages:37
issueyear:2014
journal:Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy Working Papers
http://hdl.handle.net/10807/69389
_version_ 1784273197832601600