Iceland's Recovery is 'Impressive'
Policy of letting banks fail is yielding impressive growth and employment figures.
Experts continue to praise Iceland's recovery success after the country's bank bailouts of 2008.
Unlike the US and several countries in the eurozone, Iceland allowed its banking system to fail in the global economic downturn and put the burden on the industry's creditors rather than taxpayers.
In the following years, the Icelandic government made drastic cuts that reduced the fiscal deficit from 14 percent of GDP to just two percent. At the same time, unemployment in Iceland has shrunk to less than five percent, while analysts predict the North Atlantic economy to grow some 2.8 percent by the end of 2012, according to recent reports.
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