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MarketNeutral
7th April 2010, 07:37 PM
After 18 months of economic upheaval she has decided to join the biggest emigration wave from Iceland in more than a century.

"I just don't see any future here. There isn't going to be any future in this country for the next 20 years, everything is going backwards," lamented the 46-year-old single mother, who plans to move to Norway in June.
The former estate agent who lost her job when Iceland's housing market disintegrated two years ago said that she feared she could soon be forced out of her large house in Mosfellsbaer, around 15 kilometres (nine miles) from Reykjavik.

"I don't want to sell it," she said, vowing to "fight to keep" the comfortable wooden dwelling she, her daughter Olavia, their cat, Isolde Tinna, and their dog, Candit the Bandit, have called home since 2004.

Bjoernsdottir is not alone in planning to leave Iceland's economic mess behind and seek a new future abroad. Most people in Reykjavik have someone in their surroundings who has already packed their bags and gone.

Emigration has rapidly picked up speed since the Atlantic island nation's economy crumbled in late 2008, dragged down by the collapse of its major banks. Last year it marked the largest exodus from the country since 1887.

In 2009 more than 10,600 people left the country of fewer than 320,000 inhabitants, according to official statistics, with 4,835 more people moving away than immigrating.

Foreign workers, mainly Poles, who since the beginning of the decade had been drawn to Iceland's financial miracle, were the first to leave.

But Icelanders like Bjoernsdottir have not been far behind, most heading to the country's still prosperous Nordic neighbours, especially Norway.

"I don't think I can offer a good future to my daughter Olavia" in Iceland, Bjoernsdottir said.

Like many other Icelanders who have seen their worlds collapse since the financial turmoil began, Bjoernsdottir's predicament stems from the decision, on advice from her banker, to take up a loan in foreign currency.

Repayments on her loan, in yens and Swiss francs, became insurmountable after the Icelandic krona nose-dived following the banking sector implosion.

"My loans are twice as high as they were," she said, shaking her head in disgust. "The payments keep going higher and higher, so I have to leave, I'm forced to!"

Bjoernsdottir lost her estate agency job t the end of 2008 as the crisis hammered Iceland's economy. Since then she has picked up temporary teaching work, but that position also disappeared last September.

Analysts expect Iceland's beleaguered economy to stabilise in 2010, but gross domestic product shrank 6.5 per cent last year.

Other victims of Iceland's financial woes have ended up with one foot in and the other out of the country.

Svanbjoern Einarsson, a 44-year-old father of three, says he is trapped in the country due to an unsellable house that he does not want to abandon.

Instead, the engineer has chosen to work for six-week stretches in Norway's oil capital Stavanger on the western coast, with occasional one or two-week breaks home with his family.

"It's very difficult. When I work I forget about it, but in the evening it's very tough," he said.

Long-term, however, he acknowledged his future may be in Norway, not Iceland.

Like many of their countrymen forced into exile, both Bjoernsdottir and Einarsson blame Reykjavik for their country's plight.

"I'm so angry about this government," Bjoernsdottir said.

Iceland's first ever Left-wing government came to power last year after the previous Right-wing administration collapsed following a wave of protests blaming it for the state of the economy.

But the current government is under fire over a deal to pay out massive compensation to Britain and the Netherlands for costs incurred following the fall of the online bank Icesave in October 2008.

Iceland has agreed to pay out €3.9 billion ($5.3 billion) to compensate for money the two countries paid out to 340,000 of their citizens hit by the bank's collapse.

"I had great hopes when the Left-wing government was elected, that they would do something against corruption and the abusive loans, but all they do is talk about Icesave," Einarsson said.

In a March 6 referendum, more than 93 per cent of Icelandic voters rejected a deal to repay Britain and the Netherlands at a high interest rate. Reykjavik has since said it will try to secure a more favourable agreement.

Bjoernsdottir was among those who voted down the deal - and says the debacle strengthened her determination to leave Iceland.

"I don't want my daughter to have to pay for this," she said. "I just have such a bad feeling about what's happening here."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/expatnews/7562766/Icelanders-opt-for-exile.html

dysgenic
7th April 2010, 10:48 PM
Pretty sick shit, and it shouldn't be ignored. Banks trying to jack them for the bankers screw ups. Wolves guarding the hen house, same as it ever was I guess.

Ponce
7th April 2010, 10:55 PM
Every one is moving elsewhere, but unless you already have a place it would then be very hard to do so..........

I keep telling people to "Think and plan today, for tomorrow" and they make fun of me.

keehah
7th April 2010, 11:25 PM
And in Ireland:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/commentary/ireland-one-piigs-club-member-seeking-eviction/article1519556/

[01/04/2010] Compare this to Ireland, a country mauled not just by gaping deficits but by banks that were hit by the equivalent of a neutron bomb - standing, though barely, and able to function only because they have been foisted onto the taxpayer. Anglo Irish Bank, which yesterday announced an Irish record loss of €12.7-billion ($17.4-billion) in the 15 months to the end of December, is 100 per cent owned by the government. The government also owns big minority stakes in Bank of Ireland and Allied Irish Banks; those holdings are set to rise.

"Our worst fears have been surpassed," Finance Minister Brian Lenihan told the Irish Parliament this week. "Irish banking made appalling lending decisions that will cost the taxpayer dearly for years to come."
http://www.bigissuescotland.com/features/view/254

[06/04/2010] The last remains of Ireland’s long and extraordinary economic boom are visible whichever way you arrive in Dublin. By air, construction cranes hang frozen over the Liffey – monuments to dead development near the mouth of the river. Driving into the city from the west, countless half-finished housing estates, unlit and abandoned, leave the outsider with an eerie sense of calamity, as if passing the scene of some terrible accident.

Eighteen months on from a world-wide crash, the Republic remains shell-shocked by the scale of its own particular collapse...

Passing the graveyards of empty houses on his way into Dublin leaves Paul Rothery, a plumbing sub-contractor, shaking his head in frustration. At the height of the madness, the 55-year-old’s small firm was completing three bathrooms every two weeks. Then the phone stopped ringing.
“Building was so big it was unbelievable,” he recalls.

“People were buying up houses at €750,000 that cost €50,000 to build, and the government never thought it was gong to end. They were giving all these loans to the big developers. With the bankers, they were like a cartel. They were the biggest bunch of crooks this side of the Mississippi. It’s embarrassing. I’ve stopped reading the newspapers because I can’t stand hearing about these people.”

In the city centre, Dublin appears as lively as ever, until you notice all the To Let signs along Grafton Street, the listless staff standing around at the doors of once-busy hotels, and the graffiti in the financial district that reads: FIANNA FAIL – CORRUPT SHOWER OF BASTARDS. At the offices of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) in Parnell Square, Macdara Doyle, one of the senior officials, recalls the morning Fianna Fail ministers told him there would be no budget negotiations with the unions. “Twenty years of trust evaporated in half an hour,” he seethes.

“They bought into the business agenda, they wanted to be seen as tough, and then did laps of honour about Ireland not being Greece. They’ve adopted measures the Tories in Britain would love to adopt. What you’ll see now is open warfare between the government and its employees.”

Hardly an appealing prospect to a generation of young Irish men and women raised to expect nice cars, property portfolios and a bit of money in their pockets. Many are leaving the country. Yet Stephen McLarnon, organiser of Working Abroad trade fairs, does not feel the new wave of emigration is cause for despair. McLarnon says he can have young people out of the country in 48 hours and working within two weeks.

“The Irish are the greatest travellers in the world – second only to the Jews,” he jokes. “Yes, there will be a bit of an exodus for a few years, but there’s a lot of nonsense talked about the brain-drain. There are so many young people sitting without jobs – they’re better seeing the world and gaining experience. The world is a small place – we can’t afford to all be born, live and work in Ireland.”

Rothery knows his pluming business stands a better chance of picking up in Canada or Australia, but it is family, not a love of his country, that is keeping him here. “I don’t feel I owe anything to Ireland,” he tells me. “The only reason I’m still here is to look after my mother, who’s in her 80s. Otherwise I’d be gone.”