move their capital somewhere else—preferably before everyone else does. Asset
prices fall (as foreigners sell) and the currency plunges. Both of these things
make the underlying economic problems worse, which causes asset prices and
the currency to plunge further. The country pleads with the rest of the world to
help stop the downward economic spiral.
To get a sense of how this all plays out, let’s look at the most recent victim:
Iceland. Iceland is not a poor, developing country. In fact, Iceland was at the top
of the UN Human Development Index rankings in 2008. Here are Iceland’s three
acts, as best I can figure them out:
Act I. In the first decade of the twenty-first century, Iceland’s currency, the
Icelandic krona, was extremely strong, and real interest rates were high by global
standards. Iceland’s relatively unregulated banks were attracting capital from all
over the world as investors sought high real returns. At the peak, Iceland’s banks
had assets 10 times the size of the country’s entire GDP. The banks were using
this huge pool of capital to make the kinds of investments that seemed very
smart in 2006. Meanwhile, the high domestic interest rates induced Icelanders to
borrow in other currencies, even for relatively small purchases. An economist at
the University of Iceland told CNN Money, “When you bought a car, you’d be
asked, ‘How do you want the financing? Half in yen and half in euros?’”
9
Act II. The global financial crisis was bad for the world and disastrous for
Iceland. Iceland’s banks suffered huge losses from bad investments and
nonperforming loans. By the fall of 2008, the country’s three major banks were
defunct; the central bank, which had taken control of the largest private banks,
was technically in default as well. The
New York Times reported a story in
November 2008 that began, “People go bankrupt all the time. Companies do,
too. But countries?”
As the krona plummeted, the cost of all those consumer loans in foreign
currencies skyrocketed. Think about it: If you borrow in euros, and the krona
loses half its value relative to the euro, the monthly payment in krona on your
loan
doubles. Of course, many of the assets that Icelanders had purchased with
those loans, such as homes and property, were simultaneously plummeting in
value.
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