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Thorvaldur Gylfason

Islands økonomiske udvikling efter anden verdenskrig. Thorvaldur Gylfason. Economic developments in Iceland since 1945. Thorvaldur Gylfason. Three key dates. 1904 Home rule Icelandic Minister for Icelandic affairs, responsible to the Althing

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Thorvaldur Gylfason

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  1. Islands økonomiske udvikling efter anden verdenskrig Thorvaldur Gylfason

  2. Economic developments in Iceland since 1945 Thorvaldur Gylfason

  3. Three key dates 1904 Home rule • Icelandic Minister for Icelandic affairs, responsible to the Althing • Supreme executive power transferred from Copenhagen to Reykjavík 1918 Sovereignty • Royal union with Denmark • Foreign affairs still handled by Denmark 1944 Independence • Controversial: some wanted to wait

  4. Three key persons Jón Sigurðsson (1811-1879) • Father of the Republic • Iceland’s first economist, strong advocate of free trade, education, and other liberal causes Valtýr Guðmundsson (1860-1928) • Initiated movement leading to Home Rule • Stressed economic and technological progress before full, formal independence Hannes Hafstein (1861-1922) • First minister, revered poet

  5. Iceland’s economic development since 1945 Rapid economic growth: Revolution • Iceland: 2½% per year 1900-2000 • Denmark: 2% per year 1900-2000 Major sources of rapid growth • Institutions: Democracy, liberty, equality • Investment • Education • Trade • Diversification away from fish

  6. Iceland’s economic development since 1945 Further sources of rapid growth • Escalating foreign debt • Living beyond our means • Question of sustainability • Hard work • Need long hours to make ends meet • Mixed blessing: Sign of costly inefficiency • Rural interests are overrepresented in the Althing • Special-interest politics has delayed modernization in the direction of a wide-open market economy

  7. More on trade and diversification Foreign trade is key Goods, services, capital, labor • “Four freedoms” (EEA) Ideas, technology, innovations • Trade is education Fierce debate in Iceland … • … since 1843, when Jón Sigurðsson published his first treatise on trade

  8. Foreign trade is key • For example, debate in 1920s about whether to import foreign workers to “enlarge” Iceland • Those in favor stressed efficiency gains from industrial expansion • Those against emphasized threat to Iceland’s national identity • Debate continues • To join or not to join the EU? • Iceland vs. Norway

  9. Foreign trade is key Iceland’s entry into EEA ten years later • 33 MPs of 63 voted for EEA agreement Substantial and diverse gains • Backbone of Iceland’s economic liberalization in the 1990s But, for Iceland, EEA is not enough • Local oligopoly hurts consumers Even EU membership is not enough • National currency hinders trade

  10. Foreign trade is key • In these debates, • there are those who look outward and want to make Iceland more like other countries nearby, and larger … • ... and there are also those who look inward and wish to be on guard against foreign influences and want to keep Iceland different, and small • Some want a mixture of both • Beware of false contrasts • Openness can be a source of strength

  11. Foreign trade is key • Trade is key to diversification, which also matters greatly for growth • Major challenge • Develop human resources through education • Iceland’s success derives from its well-educated people, not fish in the sea • Natural-resource dependence has proved to be a mixed blessing around the world: question of education, inter alia

  12. These slides can be viewed on my website: www.hi.is/~gylfason In conclusion The key to lasting economic success is a market economy based on free trade, diversified economic activity, well-educated labor, and sound policies and institutions The End Political sovereignty, then full independence, helped Iceland achieve these goals

  13. Jón Sigurðsson “When trade was free in ancient times, the country lived its golden age.” (1843) Foreign trade restrictions were lifted in 1855 “You think that someone may swallow us up. Let them gobble, in the sense that they trade and do business with us.”

  14. Valtýr

  15. Hannes Hafstein

  16. GDP per capita 1975-2001 (US$, ppp) Denmark and Iceland’s growth performance since 1975 is almost indistinguishable

  17. GDP per capita 1975-2001 (US$, ppp) Denmark and Iceland’s growth performance since 1975 is almost indistinguishable Ireland caught up, and surpassed us

  18. Investment 1960-2001 (% of GDP) Quantity vs. quality Similar investment behavior in Iceland and Denmark since mid-1980s Before, egged on by high inflation, Icelanders invested more

  19. Tertiary education 1970-2001 (% of cohort) Denmark remains ahead of Iceland in higher education Recently, spurred by proliferation of different colleges, some private, tertiary education enrolment has risen

  20. Exports 1960-2001 (% of GDP) Exports from Iceland have been stagnant relative to national income since 1870 Exports equivalent to one third of GDP: too small for such a small country

  21. Foreign direct investment 1974-2001(% of GDP) Iceland has also been a reluctant recipient of FDI This reflects a general reluctance to engage in free trade, as witnessed by Iceland’s unwillingness to join the EU

  22. High-tech exports 1988-2001 (% of total exports) Iceland has not been at the forefront of the high-tech revolution Manufacturing has been hurt by preferential treatment of fisheries

  23. Primary exports 1962-2001 (% of merchandise exports) Iceland has begun to diversify its economic base Fisheries account for 40% of exports and less than 10% of GDP and the labor force

  24. Current account balance 1980-2005 (% of GDP) Forecasts

  25. Foreign debt 1980-2003 (% of GDP) !

  26. GDP per hour of work 2002 (US$ at 1999 prices)

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