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Countries with larger banking systems can follow Iceland's example, says Adriaan van der Knaap, a managing director at UBS AG.
"It wouldn't upset the financial system," says Van der Knaap, who has advised Iceland's bank resolution committees.
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Arni Pall Arnason, 44, Iceland's minister of economic affairs, says the decision to make debt holders share the pain saved the country's future.
"If we'd guaranteed all the banks' liabilities, we'd be in the same situation as Ireland," says Arnason, whose Social Democratic Alliance was a junior coalition partner in the Haarde government.
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"In the beginning, banks and other financial institutions in Europe were telling us, "Never again will we lend to you,'" Einarsdottir says. "Then it was 10 years, then 5. Now they say they might soon be ready to lend again."
And Iceland's prosecution of white collar fraud played a big part in its recovery:
[The U.S. and Europe have thwarted white collar fraud investigations ... let alone prosecutions.] On the other hand, Iceland has prosecuted the fraudster bank heads (and here and here) and their former prime minister, and their economy is recovering nicely " because trust is being restored in the financial system.
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