sorry, Dave, my screen blew up before I could finish my last post. Here's Robert Peston's take on it on the BBC blog (and he's proved pretty acute on the crisis so far):
"And if you wish to know which economies are perceived by global investors to be most flawed and vulnerable, you could do worse than look at the price of insuring sovereign debt in the credit default swap market.
"Those CDS prices tell you that Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Sweden, and the Netherlands are all perceived to be more credit-worthy - to be in a better position to service their national debt - than either the US or the UK."
Clearly some countries are not on that list, notably Iceland, a smaller economy where one bank has got into trouble. And I realise that things may yet turn out for the worse. But I still think this is more of a crisis in the USA and UK than elsewhere and that their systems are to blame.