Ísland hefur fengið litla beina erlenda fjárfestingu á síðustu árum — hrein erlend fjárfesting var neikvæð að meðaltali um -0,6 milljarða dala á ári 2015–2023. Til samanburðar fengu Danmörk 8,1 milljarð, Noregur 5,4 milljarða og Svíþjóð 23,7 milljarða dala að meðaltali á ári.
Enska frumtextinn
Iceland has received very little net foreign direct investment in recent years — in fact, average net FDI inflows over 2015–2023 were negative at approximately -$0.6 billion annually, indicating net outflows. By contrast, Denmark averaged $8.1 billion, Norway $5.4 billion, Finland $8.8 billion, and Sweden $23.7 billion in annual net FDI inflows over the same period. This suggests Iceland's small market size and currency risk may deter foreign investment relative to EU/euro-area peers.
Heimild
World Bank — World Development Indicators
Alþjóðabankinn er alþjóðleg þróunarstofnun sem birtir World Development Indicators, umfangsmikinn gagnagrunn um efnahagsþróun og félagslega vísa landa víðsvegar um heim.
Skoða heimild ↗Fyrirvarar
FDI flows are highly volatile and can be distorted by one-off transactions, holding company structures, and round-tripping. Iceland's negative average partly reflects Icelandic companies expanding abroad. Population-adjusted figures would provide better context. Sweden's high figure reflects its much larger economy.
Notuð í greiningum (1)
Raunveruleg svik við fullveldi þjóðarinnar Vísir
- Að hluta staðfest Styður Kvótakóngar og fjármagnseigendur hagnast á íslenska krónunni og þeim vöxtum og verðbólgu sem henni fylgja.