Time has now come to learn the first teachings of this tsunami which has engulfed everything on its way.
The first thing to notice is that insurance was able to withstand the impact of the crisis as it did not collapse as the banking and motor industries did. It is not a systemic risk. The crisis is due to failures in the regulatory system of the American financial market.
The second finding pertains to the role of public authorities. The taboo of nationalizations, however temporary, has been shattered by the same party who has been its biggest opponent, in the near past: the United States of America. Henceforth, the State stands as the ultimate recourse, the only genuine rampart against the downturn of international finance.
Eventually, the last finding is about emerging countries which have become the major catalysts of the world's economy. China, India, Brazil and Saudi Arabia are pulling the rest of the world. Developed countries have little accumulation of growth and their future partially rests on their capacity to access emerging countries' mega markets.