Crosswords1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.// Norway has that much [£1.5 Trillion] and more in credit //
// Norway didn't squander its oil revenues //
Sadly, we are both wrong. Norway does not have a huge surplus, and it did squander its oil riches...
// First, the oil fund is a mathematical artifice. At three-quarters of a trillion dollars, the Norwegian Oil Fund appears to provide plenty for a country with scarcely 5 million citizens. Yet the country has accumulated a foreign debt that, at $657 billion, is almost as massive. Subtracting the debt from the fund’s $740 billion leaves a balance of only $83 billion. In other words, there is a treasure chest, but it is almost empty: Njord’s prize for future generations is only a little more than 10 percent of its putative value. //
http:// www.was hington times.c om/news /2013/d ec/25/v itenber g-norwa ys-myth ical-oi l-wealt h/
// Norway didn't squander its oil revenues //
Sadly, we are both wrong. Norway does not have a huge surplus, and it did squander its oil riches...
// First, the oil fund is a mathematical artifice. At three-quarters of a trillion dollars, the Norwegian Oil Fund appears to provide plenty for a country with scarcely 5 million citizens. Yet the country has accumulated a foreign debt that, at $657 billion, is almost as massive. Subtracting the debt from the fund’s $740 billion leaves a balance of only $83 billion. In other words, there is a treasure chest, but it is almost empty: Njord’s prize for future generations is only a little more than 10 percent of its putative value. //
http://
// At their mid-80s peak, oil and gas revenues were worth more than 3% of national income. According to the chief economist at PricewaterhouseCoopers, John Hawksworth, had all this money been set aside and invested in ultra-safe assets it would have been worth £450bn by 2008. He admits that is a very conservative estimate: Sukhdev Johal, professor of accounting at Queen Mary University of London, thinks the total might well have been £850bn by now. //
So what happened to the money? It was used to fund tax cuts for the rich and super rich by Nigel Lawson in the 1980s and 90s.
So what happened to the money? It was used to fund tax cuts for the rich and super rich by Nigel Lawson in the 1980s and 90s.