Iceland experienced a financial crisis in 2008–2009 when its banking system collapsed, the currency lost half its value, most businesses became technically insolvent, house prices fell, and household debt increased due to indexation to foreign currencies or the price level. This paper tells the story of the crisis and maps the losses to households using a dataset from tax returns that includes all taxpayers in the country and contains the value of housing, mortgage debt, disposable income, and net worth. For relative losses in net worth, the results show that families with children, especially those with parents aged between 24 and 45 years, suffered the largest proportional losses in net worth. The losses were also greater in urban areas. ...
The global financial and economic crisis has struck Iceland with extreme force. Iceland’s three main...
The global financial crisis has provoked a robust debate in international political economy literatu...
The impact of the changing economic environment on Irish households has been significant, with net w...
Iceland experienced a financial crisis in 2008–2009 when its banking system collapsed, the currency ...
The fall of the banking sector in 2008, was the beginning of the biggest financial crisis since the ...
Iceland experienced a significant financial meltdown and subsequent economic downturn after the 2008...
The author analyzes the successful strategy of overcoming financial breakdown in the case study of I...
This paper documents how the Icelandic banking system grew from 100 percent of GDP in 1998 to 9 time...
The economic crisis that burst in 2007 was one of the harshest-if not the harshest- in the recent hi...
Iceland became the first developed country in 30 years to request help from the IMF in 2009. While t...
The paper draws lessons from the collapse of Iceland’s banking system in October 2008. The rapid exp...
The aim of this working paper is to examine social capital in Iceland, as measured in terms of socia...
At year-end 2005, almost all of the total assets of Iceland’s banking system were concentrated in ju...
We investigate the Feldstein and Horioka (1980) hypothesis for Iceland. First, we analyse the saving...
This paper concentrates on the beginning of the mortgage crisis on the United States mortgage market...
The global financial and economic crisis has struck Iceland with extreme force. Iceland’s three main...
The global financial crisis has provoked a robust debate in international political economy literatu...
The impact of the changing economic environment on Irish households has been significant, with net w...
Iceland experienced a financial crisis in 2008–2009 when its banking system collapsed, the currency ...
The fall of the banking sector in 2008, was the beginning of the biggest financial crisis since the ...
Iceland experienced a significant financial meltdown and subsequent economic downturn after the 2008...
The author analyzes the successful strategy of overcoming financial breakdown in the case study of I...
This paper documents how the Icelandic banking system grew from 100 percent of GDP in 1998 to 9 time...
The economic crisis that burst in 2007 was one of the harshest-if not the harshest- in the recent hi...
Iceland became the first developed country in 30 years to request help from the IMF in 2009. While t...
The paper draws lessons from the collapse of Iceland’s banking system in October 2008. The rapid exp...
The aim of this working paper is to examine social capital in Iceland, as measured in terms of socia...
At year-end 2005, almost all of the total assets of Iceland’s banking system were concentrated in ju...
We investigate the Feldstein and Horioka (1980) hypothesis for Iceland. First, we analyse the saving...
This paper concentrates on the beginning of the mortgage crisis on the United States mortgage market...
The global financial and economic crisis has struck Iceland with extreme force. Iceland’s three main...
The global financial crisis has provoked a robust debate in international political economy literatu...
The impact of the changing economic environment on Irish households has been significant, with net w...