Reuters (July 17)
Following the 1986 Iceland Summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, the U.S. ultimately proved the victor. Three decades later, things look different. “Washington had another unparalleled opportunity,” but “the American president was outfoxed by a wily Russian leader playing from a position of unquestioned strength, toying with a deeply damaged counterpart.”
Tags: Damaged, Gorbachev, Iceland, Opportunity, Outfoxed, Putin, Reagan, Strength, Summit, Trump, U.S.
Forbes (March 13)
“Like Iceland in its heyday, Singapore’s economic stability and vitality – on the surface at least – has made it the envy of the world at a time when most Western economies are languishing with feeble growth, and high rates of unemployment and poverty.” And, just like Iceland, the Switzerland of Asia will suffer when its economic bubble is punctured. In the meantime, “Singapore’s bubble economy may continue inflating for several more years if the U.S. Fed Funds Rate and SIBOR continue to be held at such low levels.”
Tags: Asia, Bubble, Economic stability, Fed, Growth, Iceland, Poverty, SIBOR, Singapore, Switzerland, U.S., Unemployment, Western economies
New York Times (March 28)
“Should Scotland be an independent country?” On September 18, 2014, Scottish voters will answer this question. “After more than three centuries of political union, breaking up would be complicated…. Looking at the financial woes of small, independent European states like Cyprus and Iceland, Scottish voters may want to think twice about going it alone.”
Institutional Investor (November 1)
Iceland has bounced back faster than expected. Its top three banks collapsed in 2008, leaving the country in shambles. “But Iceland fought back—and won.” While its economy remains fragile, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) now predicts Iceland will grow by 3% in 2012. “If there’s a lesson, it’s …that Iceland is in better shape than Ireland partly because it let its banks go bust.”
The New Yorker (September 6)
Is China going the way of Japan? Similar bubbles and certain excesses seem to indicate China may be headed for a fall. Chinese real-estate tycoon Huang Nubo unveiled plans “to buy seventy-five thousand acres of Iceland.” The “weirdness” of this recalls similar weirdness during the height of the bubble, such as a 1989 plan by the head of Nomura Securities to make California a joint yen/dollar currency zone. That was three years after “the value of the nation’s real estate doubled in a single year.” It doubled again in 1987, making Japan “the world’s largest creditor, holding thirty percent of U.S. debt, and … home to the world’s ten largest banks, with a stock exchange bigger than Wall Street.” By 1993, it was all over. Does China’s “Iceland moment” signal the end of their bubble? Or “Will it be simply a quirky milestone on the continued ascent?”
Tags: Bubble, California, China, Iceland, Japan
The Telegraph (August 30)
In a finding unlikely to shock many, an international study reveals “the UK is the worst nation in Europe for the teaching of foreign languages.” The best nations are Luxembourg, Finland and Iceland where the average schoolchild learns more than 2 foreign languages. In contrast, children in the UK learn just 1, down from 1.3 in 2002.