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While the UK faced a taxpayer-funded bailout of "too big to fail" banks and largely spared high-profile executives from legal consequences, Iceland took a bold, divergent path.
With its own economic collapse, Iceland nationalized failing institutions, imposed strict capital controls, and prosecuted over 30 bankers and executives—including CEOs of major collapsed banks—for crimes like market manipulation and fiduciary breaches.
We compare the two nations’ responses, highlighting Iceland’s commitment to the rule of law and prioritizing citizens over corporate interests, and ask whether the UK can learn from this model to rebuild trust, ensure fair governance, and foster long-term economic stability.
Key Takeaways:
Themes: Accountability, rule of law, economic resilience, national sovereignty, and the ethics of financial governance.
While the UK faced a taxpayer-funded bailout of "too big to fail" banks and largely spared high-profile executives from legal consequences, Iceland took a bold, divergent path.
With its own economic collapse, Iceland nationalized failing institutions, imposed strict capital controls, and prosecuted over 30 bankers and executives—including CEOs of major collapsed banks—for crimes like market manipulation and fiduciary breaches.
We compare the two nations’ responses, highlighting Iceland’s commitment to the rule of law and prioritizing citizens over corporate interests, and ask whether the UK can learn from this model to rebuild trust, ensure fair governance, and foster long-term economic stability.
Key Takeaways:
Themes: Accountability, rule of law, economic resilience, national sovereignty, and the ethics of financial governance.