We can be optimistic about the effective handling of this crisis based on several factors. The Great Crash of 1929 has taught everyone lessons in what to do and, more importantly, in what not to do. Monetary policy is being loosened, not tightened: we can thank Milton Friedman's influential analyses for that. Fiscal policy will be expansionary, not deflationary: we all live in the age of John Maynard Keynes, whose fiscal prescriptions were unavailable in 1929 and grew out of the mistaken doctrines and policies of that time. The Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930, which led to “competitive” increases in protectionism by all, accentuated the Crash. No one is willing to repeat that error.
Neither Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, nor Hank Paulson, the Treasury secretary – nor for that matter, President George W. Bush, who must take ultimate responsibility – wants to go down in history as another President Herbert Hoover, who presided over the Great Crash.
Besides, the ideology of the US is a lack of ideology. Where Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, could not resist being photographed reading Marx's Das Kapital and announcing the death of “capitalism”, the Americans settled down to fix the problem. They will do everything required to stem the crisis: for evidence of this, witness the shift of the $700bn (€515bn, £401bn) bail-out fund from buying toxic assets to recapitalising banks.