My comment: I mean this wise comment from Ingibjorg Elsa Bjornsdottir,
a 42-year-old geologist (according to this article), ``There's so much
anger in the society now because of what has happened,'' she said.
``We're witnessing the death of Reaganism-Thatcherism. We have to go
back to our older values. The free market is not doing what it's
supposed to be doing.''

That fake wealth is a cloud that comes, goes and disappear. We cannot
not build a life on top of it, even if it looks like we are closer to
heaven.

Haarde's Free-Market Embrace May Prompt Backlash by Icelanders
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aLdcOkW2aqtA&refer=home

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) -- More than any of its Nordic neighbors, Iceland
under Prime Minister Geir Haarde imbibed the economic policies of
Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan -- state-asset sales, light
regulation and corporate growth abroad through debt.

Now that the hangover has arrived, many of Haarde's countrymen want
his Independence Party-led coalition to pay the price for turning one
of the world's wealthiest countries per capita into a beggar state
staving off depression.

``Many find that the government has mishandled the situation,'' said
Thorvaldur Gylfason, a professor of economics at the University of
Iceland and a former International Monetary Fund economist. ``A major
political realignment will take place at the next election,'' which
must be held by May 2011.

That's not soon enough for many of Iceland's 320,000 citizens, as may
become clear when the first opinion poll since the country's three
biggest banks collapsed into receivership this month is released on
Nov. 1.

``We can never ever have a fresh beginning with the same people,''
said G. Birnir Asgeirsson, owner of car retailer Bill.is. ``This was
such a big bust, they can't get around it. They can't just move on.''

Ingibjorg Elsa Bjornsdottir, a 42-year-old geologist from Selfoss near
Reykjavik, said she will vote for the Left Greens, the biggest
opposition party.

`Older Values'

``There's so much anger in the society now because of what has
happened,'' she said. ``We're witnessing the death of Reaganism-
Thatcherism. We have to go back to our older values. The free market
is not doing what it's supposed to be doing.''

That may be an understatement. Iceland was ranked fifth- wealthiest in
the world per capita in the UN 2007/2008 Human Development Index. Now,
it's facing shortages of imports including food and clothing. Controls
on foreign currency payments have been enforced to favor imports of
fuel, medicine and food.

The value of Iceland's currency has evaporated and an economy that
outgrew the U.S. and euro region every year since 2004 at the least
faces a prolonged recession, if not a depression. The economy may
shrink more than 10 percent with inflation reaching 75 percent in
months, says Danske Bank A/S Chief Analyst Lars Christensen.

The country's main stock index has lost 90 percent of its value, most
of it in the past week or so, more than double the decline in
neighboring Nordic countries like Norway and Sweden.

In response, Haarde, 57, and central bank Governor David Oddsson, 60,
have held out the begging bowl, seeking to borrow from Russia and the
IMF, which hasn't had an aid request from a Western country since
1976, when the U.K. sought a bailout.

Election Call

While Haarde expressed a willingness to negotiate terms with the
Washington-based fund two weeks ago, he said in an interview broadcast
on RUV television yesterday that the terms haven't been finalized; his
government said a deal was ``very close.''

``The people at the IMF are the experts and they're available,'' said
Beat Siegenthaler, a senior strategist at TD Securities in London.
``People are really struggling to understand why they're delaying
it.''

Steingrimur Sigfusson, leader of the Left Greens, says islanders
shouldn't have to wait for an election. The ruling coalition has 43
seats in the 63-seat parliament and Haarde's term is scheduled to end
in 2011.

``First, we have to take the rescue measures,'' he said in a telephone
interview. ``Then we have to stabilize things. And then there
definitely should be an election.''

Sigfusson predicts a shift back to more government oversight and
regulatory control.

`Greed a Virtue'

``The main enemy here is the neo-liberal privatization policies,'' he
said. ``The big mistake was to make greed a virtue. The most important
thing now is that we can shift the basic politics in more sensible and
more socially just directions so that we can build a prosperous
welfare society.''

Haarde and Oddsson led a cadre of free-marketeers who pushed Iceland
in the opposite direction, espousing the ideology of smaller
government in the 1980s and 1990s. Oddsson, a former mayor of
Reykjavik and manager of the city's health insurance fund, was prime
minister from 1991 to 1999. He was appointed central bank governor in
2004.

Haarde, who holds a master's degree in international relations from
Johns Hopkins University, spent more than two decades climbing
Iceland's political ladder. He entered parliament in 1987, became
finance minister in 1998 and Independence Party chairman in 2005. He
assumed the premiership in 2006.

When Oddsson was prime minister and Haarde was finance minister, the
government began selling the biggest state-owned banks, cut taxes and
otherwise sought to free the economy from ``the shackles of political
intervention,'' as an October 2001 government report put it.

Eliminating Distortions

The government promoted asset sales to ``increase economic efficiency
by eliminating the distortions inherent in state- ownership,'' Haarde
said in February 2003.

This contrasted with the Scandinavian welfare-based, high-tax programs
of Norway, Sweden and Denmark. The tax cuts reduced 2007 revenue --
about $7.8 billion -- to 41.4 percent of the economy, compared with
48.9 percent in Denmark and 48.2 percent in Sweden, according to the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Freed of government control, banks racked up debt that grew to 12
times the size of the economy, most of it in foreign currency loans
they now can't afford to repay.

The banks in turn lent to entrepreneurs, including 40-year- old Jon
Asgeir Johannesson, chairman of retail investor Baugur Group hf. His
company bought stores including Hamleys toy shop and clothing retailer
Karen Millen, and now Johannesson is trying to sell parts of his
business to raise cash and offset some of the debt held in Iceland's
collapsed banks.

`Scar on Our Souls'

Much of the Icelanders' anger is directed at Oddsson, a lawyer by
training, who spearheaded the sale of the banks.

``The governors of the central bank have failed miserably, and there
are vocal demands now from all directions for their removal,'' said
Gylfason. ``Precious time has been lost.''

Sigfusson, the opposition leader, agrees the bank made mistakes,
though says the ``overall responsibility'' lies with Haarde.

``It would be too cheap for the government just to point to one
official and get rid of him,'' he said. ``It's going to be a scar on
our souls for a long time.''
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