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Monday, October 13, 2008
Rich Galen :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Financial Archduke Ferdinand
by Rich Galen
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It is accepted fact that the triggering event which led to the start of World War I was the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo in 1914.

A relatively unknown person was killed in a relatively unknown place but the event cascaded into a horror leading to 40 million people being killed or wounded.

The other day, in the Wall Street Journal, there was a front page article about the collapse of the banking system in … Iceland.

According to the CIA's World Factbook, Iceland has an area slightly smaller than Kentucky and has a population of a little more the 304,000 people which is about half the population of Alaska - just to pick a State out of the hat.

The reason for the WSJ's cautionary tale about Iceland is this: The three major banks (or maybe the three only banks) in Iceland now have obligations which are put at about €100 billion.

So what? So this: Deposits in UK banks are about equal to its entire annual output of goods and services - its GDP. When Ireland announced it would guarantee the total deposits in all Irish banks, it went on the hook for about twice its GDP.

Iceland was, for most of its history, nothing more than a national sleepy fishing village. And Icelanders did pretty well at it. There were lots of fish to catch, a lot of people who wanted to buy them, and not that many Icelanders with whom to share the income.

At the turn of the century Iceland decided to privatize the three banks which had been owned and operated by the government. Like other banks, the Iceland banks decided to get into the high-risk, high-return business because everyone else was doing it and making a lot of money.

People left their fishing villages in droves and headed to the big city where, according to Charles Forelle's WSJ piece, "swank restaurants crammed downtown Reykjavik, the capital and new financial center. The main shopping street filled up with pricey boutiques selling avant-garde fashions and design cookware.

Guess what? All three banks have failed and the government has taken them over. The problem is, Iceland has only €2 billion in foreign-exchange reserves. If the banks are on the hook for €100 billion, then Iceland is looking at potential losses 50 TIMES its total reserves. Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com

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Wasn't Barney Frank the Archduke?
I thought this article would go back to the inititating government intervention: Barney Frank and the Democrats' mandating that banks (and Freddie and Sallie) offer zero down, below prime mortgages to help the "poh folks" become homeowners. It has been reported that 5 million illegal aliens have walked away from their mortgages.

If Barney and his Dem friends had not initiated this financial foolishness, Iceland would probably be solvent today.

Regulations.
The Democrats complaining about the banking problems in the US are always screaming about de-regulation. Well, Iceland and the European banks have some pretty stiff regulations on their activities and yet, they were still prime suckers for two bogus financial schemes; sub-prime lending and credit default swaps (insurance).

It would seem that the sophisticated socialists of Europe are just as prone to greed as are US capitalists and social engineers. Perhaps more so, because the Left tend to believe in something for nothing.
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