Sunday, November 2, 2008

What Happened To Small Is Beautiful?

Matthew Yglesias has a post about Iceland:

"Via Atrios, this:

No one disputes that the economic troubles of Iceland are largely the country’s fault. But there may be more to the story, at least in the view of Icelandic government, its citizens and even some outsiders. As grave as their situation already was, they say, Britain — their old friend, NATO ally and trading partner — made it immeasurably worse.

I actually sort of would dispute that the economic troubles of Iceland are largely the country’s fault. Being small is hard."

Read the whole post. I tend to agree with him, but here's my comment:


  1. Don the libertarian Democrat Says:

    I think that the big problem was this:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/02/world/europe/02iceland.html?scp=1&sq=iceland%20britain&st=cse

    “The troubles between the countries began three weeks ago when Britain took the extraordinary step of using its 2001 antiterrorism laws to freeze the British assets of a failing Icelandic bank. That appeared to brand Iceland a terrorist state.

    “I must admit that I was absolutely appalled,” the Icelandic foreign minister, Ingibjorg Solrun Gisladottir, said in an interview, describing her horror at opening the British treasury department’s home page at the time and finding Iceland on a list of terrorist entities with Al Qaeda, Sudan and North Korea, among others.

    In a volatile economic climate, in which appearance matters almost as much as reality, being associated with terrorism is not a good thing.

    “The immediate effect was to trigger an almost complete freeze on any banking transactions between Iceland and abroad,” said Jon Danielsson, an economist at the London School of Economics. “When you’re labeled a terrorist, nobody does business with you.”

    The Icelandic prime minister, Geir H. Haarde, accused Britain of “bullying a small neighbor” and said the action was “very out of proportion.” In a recent speech in Beijing, Sir Howard Davies, a former deputy governor of the Bank of England and now the director of the London School of Economics, said that Britain had used a “beggar thy neighbor” approach to Iceland.

    And an online petition signed so far by more than 20 percent of Iceland’s population said the British prime minister, Gordon Brown, had sacrificed Iceland “for his own short-term political gain,” thereby turning “a grave situation into a national disaster.”

    In other words, Britain used extraordinary measures to halt the movement of funds that Iceland needed to avert the avalanche. By the way, Britain is doing a pretty good job of looking out for it’s own interests in this crisis. Brown has just been in the Gulf trying to direct money to Britain."

By the way, the big problem that I was referring to was the current dispute with Britain. Obviously, other factors were at work in this crisis for Iceland.

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