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Iceland’s Distinct Path Through the 2008 Financial Crisis

  Aspect What Iceland Did Why It Was Different From Most Countries Immediate response Let the banks fail  – the three biggest banks (Glitnir, Landsbanki, Kaupthing) were placed into receivership and liquidated rather than being bailed out. Most advanced economies opted for massive bail‑outs to keep major banks alive (e.g., the U.S. TARP, UK’s bank recapitalisations). Capital controls Imposed  strict capital controls  in early 2008 (limits on foreign exchange transactions, restrictions on outbound transfers). Capital controls were widely discouraged by the IMF and EU at the time; many countries kept borders open to preserve market confidence. Debt restructuring Negotiated  sovereign‑debtor restructuring  with private bondholders (the “Icelandic Icesave” dispute) and used  haircuts  on foreign‑held debt. ...
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From the Ottoman Debt Office to IMF Conditionality

  From the Ottoman Debt Office to IMF Conditionality: How the ‘State‑Within‑a‑State’ Model Lives On in Modern Structural‑Adjustment Programs IN THE late 19th century the Ottoman Empire, once master of three continents, found itself reduced to a financial ward of Europe. By 1875 its debts had become unpayable. In 1881 the Decree of Muharrem created the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA), a foreign-run body that took direct control of large chunks of imperial revenue. The OPDA was not merely a collection agency; it was a state within a state, employing more staff than the empire’s own finance ministry and answering to bondholders in Paris, London and Berlin rather than the sultan in Constantinople. This episode, often overlooked, offers a stark preview of how sovereign debt can be used to restructure a country’s political economy. Here are five lessons from the world’s first large-scale international debt takeover. High on a hill overlooking the Golden Horn, the massive, f...

Who Has Pocketed Telangana's Wealth?

  T. Chiranjeevulu Retired IAS and Chairman, BC Intellectuals Forum   Telangana was forged through the sweat, blood, and sacrifices of its Bahujan people. Yet today, dominant castes are openly looting and controlling the very state these communities fought to create. This is not governance—this is daylight robbery! This is not development—it is institutionalized plunder! In a manner unprecedented in history, Telangana is being systematically looted, sold off, mortgaged, and divided. Singareni's Naini coal mine in Odisha stands as direct evidence of this exploitation. Until recently, we believed the looters were limited to leaders, contractors, and officials. Today, however, media owners have also joined this mafia of plunder! Media owners are slinging mud at each other—not in pursuit of truth, but to secure their share of the spoils! During the special Assembly sessions, the corruption in the Palamuru-Rangareddy Lift Irrigation project was exposed. ₹35,000 crores have ...

The Aristocrat in the Dungeon: The Defiant Life and Disappeared Body of Pakistan’s First Martyr

  1. Introduction: A Tale of Two Worlds The history of South Asian political struggle is haunted by the image of Hassan Nasir, a man whose life was a study in absolute contradictions. On one side was the world of the "right hand of the realm"—Nasir was the maternal grandson of Nawab Mohsin-ul-Mulk, a foundational architect of the All India Muslim League and the Aligarh Movement. On the other was the windowless "chamber of horrors" in the dungeons of the Lahore Fort. Born on August 2, 1928, into the highest echelons of Hyderabad’s Muslim aristocracy, Nasir was destined for a life of ease, affluence, and bureaucratic power. Instead, he ended his life at the age of 32 as the most feared revolutionary in Pakistan. His journey from a palace to Cell 13 represents the birth of a modern martyr, a man who possessed the pedigree of a state-builder but chose the path of a state-breaker. Why would a scion of the elite choose a life that led to a dark cell? To understand N...