So more transparency in govenment and finding a means for the masses to effect change? - yes please.
But not sure an Icelandic approach works everywhere - let's not forget Iceland was staring at economic ruin, international relations were severly damaged and the government had resigned en masse to appease a public baying for blood.
Radical measures usually need a catalyst and this was present in Iceland after 2009. It seems to be working for Iceland's rebuilding, I just can see many other establishments wanting similar levels of transparency interfering with their cosy existence.
Authored Comments
So more transparency in govenment and finding a means for the masses to effect change? - yes please.
But not sure an Icelandic approach works everywhere - let's not forget Iceland was staring at economic ruin, international relations were severly damaged and the government had resigned en masse to appease a public baying for blood.
Radical measures usually need a catalyst and this was present in Iceland after 2009. It seems to be working for Iceland's rebuilding, I just can see many other establishments wanting similar levels of transparency interfering with their cosy existence.
Just found this, seems the business don't trust IT either!
http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/news/it-architectures-still-controlled-by-financial-officers-33475