As the financial hydrogen bomb cloud over Iceland begins to fade, her citizens are beginning to adjust to life in a long, cold nuclear winter. Surrounded by a glow-in-the-dark landscape, and a currency that burns to the touch, they've begun to pick over the ruins of their previous life. With a new coalition government in the works, and the age-old practice of whaling to provide jobs, Iceland will probably pull through... though she will be vastly changed. We hope they can find some whales.
Frankly, though -- and not to seem callous -- Iceland was a weak hand. One can call upon the Galbraith Financial Principle: the best and biggest will fail last. Iceland was neither biggest, nor the best; she was merely the first country squashed flat by the 2007 Depression. The question one should be asking is not how will Iceland pull through, but rather, who's next. This piece has a very good list: Great Britain, Latvia, Greece, Ukraine, Nicaragua. We would add Mexico to this list; however, these are probably the next countries to go.
Personally, we would put our money on Great Britain: she's in rough shape, and with the annihilation of the pound sterling in the works, the Brown Government could very well go to pieces a la Iceland. When governments say they aren't concerned about the value of its issued currency, bad things can happen. The Brown Government may feel it's on top of the situation, but it's no more in control than Zimbabwe's.
Then there is the terrible crime of hubris: Mr. Paul Marshall recently told a Treasury committee that a Madoff scandal in the U.K. is "very unlikely." Funny, but we remember Mr. Madoff himself saything that very same thing... Big investors are assuring the Brown Government that there is no "U.K. Madoff," but if the government believes that load of lies... they're unworthy of governing.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
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