The President of Iceland, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson has called for
transparent scrutiny of the fundamental economic failures amongst
European institutions during the recent Global Leadership Summit 2013
(GLS2013) at London Business School, UK.
The President joined a discussion led by Richard Quest, an
International Business Correspondent for CNN International, as part of
the closing keynote Iceland´s Road to Recovery and Closing Remarks, which took place Monday 20th May 2013.
During the President’s keynote, he states, “Like in many other times
in European history, they [European Union leaders] are victims of an
ideological prison.” He continues by mentioning, “What is lacking is the
honest, intellectual, political, economic examination within the
European institutions, of the fundamental failure, which the last four
or five years has produced.”
President Grímsson explained that he can’t understand why banks are
being considered the holy churches of the modern economy, and that
Europe’s primary legacy to the world is not financial markets, but
democracy, the rule of law and human rights.
When speaking about Iceland’s recovery, President Grímsson explained
that Iceland focused on saving the welfare services of those who have
the lowest income, rather that implement the austerity measures
recommended for other European countries.
“We saw a situation where our [Iceland’s] entire demographic and
social fabric was breaking down; it was one of the most dramatic
examples in recent history that the failure of financial markets can
fundamentally threaten European and Western democracy,” explained
Grímsson.
During the keynote, Quest asked for his reasons why Grímsson chose to
veto the Icesave bailouts, even though Parliament passed this
legislation twice. Grímsson explained that the Icelandic parliament
partly passed this legislation because the “Gordon Brown government”,
supported by every European government, used the board of the IMF for
the most elaborate high-level financial blackmail [he] had ever
witnessed. Stating:
“If we didn’t make the ordinary people of Iceland responsible for the
failure of a private bank in Britain, the IMF programme for Iceland
would have been stopped, and it was for over a year. That was why the
government of the time thought that they had to make a deal, but the
interesting fact now is that we know, because it has been tested, that
this policy that was reported by every European government was so wrong;
it turned out to be financial wrong, demographically wrong and also
legally wrong.“
He followed by saying, “In order to help Europe to get out of this
deep crisis, they should ask themselves why they were so wrong in this
case; if it was even illegal within the European Financial System to ask
the people of Iceland to be responsible for the failure of a private
bank.”
The Global Leadership Summit is an annual discussion held by London
Business School, whereby leading figures in international politics and
media insight on the future of global leadership, and about the
challenges of past and modern day leadership.
To watch the keynote in full, click here – viewers will have to register first.
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