The way forward: Iceland forgives mortgage debt

Via TeleSUR:

“The government of Iceland has forgiven the mortgage debt for much of its population. This nation chose a very different way of stopping the crisis from the rest of European countries. It decided to hear the requests of the population and to put politicians and bankers on the bench of the accused three years after their financial excesses would sank one of the most prosperous economies in 2008.”

Here are additional details:

“The government and the newly constructed Icelandic banks developed a template to be used in case by case restructuring discussions between borrowers and lenders. The templates facilitated substantial debt write-downs designed to align secured debt with the supporting collateral (i.e bring the loan into line with the value of the house) and align debt service with the ability to repay.

The IMF found that such case by case negotiations safeguard property rights and reduce moral hazard, but they take time. As of January of this year, only 35% of the case by case restructuring applications had been processed. To speed things up, Iceland has introduced a debt forgiveness plan which writes down deeply underwater mortgages to 110% of the households’ pledgeable assets.

It noted that only when a comprehensive framework was put in place and a clear expiration date for relief measures announced that debt write-downs finally took off. As of January 2012, 15 to 20% of all Icelandic mortgages have been or are in the process of being written down.”

Watch the short video here:

1 Comment The way forward: Iceland forgives mortgage debt

  1. AvatarTom Crowl

    Iceland’s people understand that an economy is about the lives of all the people there… the things they do… the trust that they have in each other… and the decisions they make TOGETHER.

    It’s NOT about money. Money is a tool. And the current global money and debt system is a cancer…

    The very fact that this crisis is global should make it clear that this is related to cross-border institutional pathologies rather than some local ‘fault’ of the citizenry.

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