After a four-year spending spree, Icelanders are  flooding the supermarkets one last time, stocking up on food as the collapse of  the banking system threatens to cut the island off from imports.  
 ``We have had crazy days for a week now,'' said Johannes  Smari Oluffsson, manager of the Bonus discount grocery store in Reykjavik's main  shopping center. ``Sales have doubled.'' 
 Bonus, a nationwide chain, has stock at its warehouse  for about two weeks. After that, the shelves will start emptying unless it can  get access to foreign currency, the 22-year-old manager said, standing in a  walk-in fridge filled with meat products, among the few goods on sale produced  locally. 
 Iceland's foreign currency market has seized up after  the three largest banks collapsed and the government abandoned an attempt to peg  the exchange rate. Many banks won't trade the krona and suppliers from abroad  are demanding payment in advance. The government has asked banks to prioritize  foreign currency transactions for essentials such as food, drugs and oil.  
 The crisis is already hitting clothing retailers. A  short walk from Bonus in the capital's Kringlan shopping center, Ragnhildur Anna  Jonsdottir, 38, owner of the Next Plc clothing store, said she can't get any  foreign currency to pay for incoming shipments and, even if she could, the  exchange rate would be prohibitively high. 
 ``We aren't getting new shipments in, as we normally do  once a week,'' Jonsdottir said. ``This is the third week that we haven't had any  shipments.'' 
 Bankrupt 
 Iceland's 320,000 inhabitants have enjoyed four years of  economic growth in excess of 4 percent as banks and businesses expanded abroad,  buying up companies from brokerages to West Ham United soccer club. Now, the  three biggest banks, Kaupthing Bank hf, Landsbanki Island hf and Glitnir Bank hf  have collapsed under the weight of about $61 billion in debts, 12 times the size  of the economy, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. 
 The central bank, or Sedlabanki, ditched its attempt to  peg the krona to a basket of currencies on Oct. 9, after just two days, citing  ``insufficient support'' in the market. Nordea Bank AB, the biggest Scandinavian  lender, said the same day that the krona hadn't been traded on the spot market,  while the last quoted price was 340 per euro, compared with 122 a month ago.  
``There is absolutely no currency in the country today to import,'' said Andres Magnusson, chief executive officer of the Icelandic Federation of Trade and Services in Reykjavik. ``The only way we can solve this problem is to get the IMF into the country.''
 ``There is absolutely no currency in the country today to import,'' said Andres Magnusson, chief executive officer of the Icelandic Federation of Trade and Services in Reykjavik. ``The only way we can solve this problem is to get the IMF into the country.''
Imports Dependency 
 The International Monetary Fund sent a delegation to the  island last week. Prime Minister Geir Haarde said on Oct. 9 his country may ask  it for money after failing to get ``the response that we felt that we should be  able to get'' from European governments and central banks. The state will also  start talks with Russia over a possible 4 billion-euro ($5.5 billion) loan.  
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