In the eyes of stupefied European observers, the former ultra-free marketeers in power in Washington put their convictions aside to rush in and help a financial sector in disarray. The Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department have used the whole gamut of interventions: provision of liquidity to prevent the choking-off of credit, bailout subsidies (the aid offered to the bank JPMorgan Chase to help it buy Bear Stearns), buying-up of credit (the $700 billion bailout plan intended to acquire dubious debt from banks), and even—horresco referens—nationalization (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and AIG).
Another surprising subject has been public opinion’s reflexive rejection of the Paulson plan to save the banks, ultimately adopted after great difficulty. It was deemed unacceptable that the whole nation should pay for the missteps of a few financiers. This reaction is explained by American society’s traditional hostility to “big government.” Another reason may be the differing sensibilities of Americans and Europeans with respect to fiscality and saving. The former are very ticklish taxpayers: Most pay income tax, which in the United States constitutes a significantly greater portion of fiscal receipts (nearly 35%) than in Europe (around 23%). On the other hand, their savings rate is very low (1.8% in 2008, compared with 12.3% in Europe): Having placed less money in banks, they feel less concerned by banks’ survival.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.