Noruega: El manual de la buena vida

ummmm...hecho de menos el discurso del liberal de turno...si es que tengo curiosidad por ver que argumenta....ánimo insignes ideólogos.

Dos opciones:
1.¡pues si hubieran sido liberales les hubiera ido todavía mejor!
2.Noruega ya es liberal
 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Solo los usuarios registrados pueden ver el contenido de este tema, mientras tanto puedes ver el primer y el último mensaje de cada página.

Regístrate gratuitamente aquí para poder ver los mensajes y participar en el foro. No utilizaremos tu email para fines comerciales.

Únete al mayor foro de economía de España

 
Lastima que no haya testimonio escrito alguno tuyo durante aquella epoca advirtiendo de la que se le venia encima a la pequeña isla,a toro pasado que facil es decir "ya os lo dije gñeeee" :rolleye:


Hubo gente que lo advirtió ya en 2005 pero no les hicieron ni puñetero caso, por supuesto. Igual que antes del 2008 cualquiera que dijese que en España había una burbuja era tomado por loco o friki :roto2:.

BBC NEWS | Business | Warning on Iceland bank's fitness
The management of the Icelandic Kaupthing bank were "not fit and proper" to control a UK bank, MPs have been told.

Tony Shearer, former head of investment bank Singer and Friedlander (S&F), told MPs that he warned UK regulators in 2005 when Kaupthing bought his bank.

But last October UK savers in Kaupthing had to be rescued by the authorities when that bank faced collapse.
...

He explained that he and two senior colleagues passed on their concerns about Kaupthing's management issues, corporate governance, and quality of earnings to the Financial Services Authority (FSA) in April 2005.

But the response of the regulator, he said, was to continue approving the takeover.

-------------
Wall Street on the Tundra | Politics | Vanity Fair
Back in April 2006, however, an emeritus professor of economics at the University of Chicago named Bob Aliber took an interest in Iceland. Aliber found himself at the London Business School, listening to a talk on Iceland, about which he knew nothing. He recognized instantly the signs. Digging into the data, he found in Iceland the outlines of what was so clearly a historic act of financial madness that it belonged in a textbook. “The Perfect Bubble,” Aliber calls Iceland’s financial rise, and he has the textbook in the works: an updated version of Charles Kindleberger’s 1978 classic, Manias, Panics, and Crashes, a new edition of which he’s currently editing. In it, Iceland, he decided back in 2006, would now have its own little box, along with the South Sea Bubble and the Tulip Craze—even though Iceland had yet to crash. For him the actual crash was a mere formality.

Word spread in Icelandic economic circles that this distinguished professor at Chicago had taken a special interest in Iceland. In May 2008, Aliber was invited by the University of Iceland’s economics department to give a speech. To an audience of students, bankers, and journalists, he explained that Iceland, far from having an innate talent for high finance, had all the markings of a giant bubble, but he spoke the technical language of academic economists. (“Monetary Turbulence and the Icelandic Economy,” he called his speech.) In the ***owing Q&A session someone asked him to predict the future, and he lapsed into plain English. As an audience member recalls, Aliber said, “I give you nine months. Your banks are dead. Your bankers are either stupid or greedy. And I’ll bet they are on planes trying to sell their assets right now.”
 
Volver