Brazil Says Solution for Global Crisis Is Free Trade and Competition

zzz Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil, is urging leading economies to complete stalled global trade talks warning that protectionism could tip the economic crisis into chaos.

"If the United States, Europe, Brazil close themselves, the crisis could become much bigger and produce chaos instead of a solution," Lula told industry leaders Monday in São Paulo during a visit by Jan Peter Balkenende, the prime minister of the Netherlands.

Brazil said last month it may challenge the legality of a "Buy American" clause in the US economic stimulus package at the World Trade Organization, or WTO.

Lula also intends to speak against global protectionism and for the completion of the WTO's Doha round at the Group of 20 meeting of leading economies in London next month.

"The Doha round was almost finished but we had elections in the United States and then India and politics dominated. Now, nothing stands in the way," said Lula. "The Doha round is more of a political than a financial decision."

The seven-year-old talks intended to further global free trade collapsed in July over differences between India and the United States on safeguards to protect farmers from a flood of food imports.

As a major commodities exporter, Brazil has been a key player in the Doha round and had hoped the G20 would honor a November pledge in Washington to avoid protectionism.

The United States Trade Representative warned on Monday there would be no agreement on the Doha round until other countries made stronger commitments to open their markets to US goods.

Lula frequently urges other countries to pour cash into anti-cyclical measures to help keep their economies afloat amid the global crisis but has himself refrained from massive public spending plans at home that would increase government debt.

"The solution to this crisis is more (free) market, more free trade and more competition – like the developed world always said over the past 30 years," underlined Lula da Silva.

However on a more sober tone Lula speaking at his radio program "Breakfast with the President" predicted that the Brazilian declining job market will begin to feel a difference later this month.

Brazil's manufacturing sector has been hard hit by the global slowdown with declining activity in steel, auto and aircraft industries leading to massive losses of jobs.

"I'm convinced and optimistic that we were the last (country) into the crisis and we'll be first out of the crisis," he underlined pointing out to the potential of the domestic market.

"Brazil is undergoing a slowdown not a recession, as most other countries" he added.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Is Hungry for US Firms: Swift, Anheuser Busch and Now Burger King

American fast-food giant Burger King announced that it has decided to sell the company ...

Lucky Brazil to Have Such a Competent Helmsman Amid Global Financial Tempest

Much has been written about the subprime mortgage mess in the US, which has ...

Multinationals Boycott Soy from Brazil’s Deforested Amazon

In a significant development for rainforest protection, Greenpeace and major UK food companies have ...

Ghana’s Black Stars Promise a Ball Show Against Brazil

Ghana is the only one of the five African nations to have made it ...

1, 2, 3, 4 Polls See Lula Winning Reelection in Brazil by Landslide

Four surveys in a row have given Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva ...

Brazil Moves Fast to Change Election Laws

A Federal Elections Court (TSE) commission made up of Brazilians jurists and experts has ...

Brazil: FAO Wants Closer Ties Between Davos and WSF

The representative of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Brazil, José ...

Overcrowding and Lack of Maintenance Leave 5 Dead in Rio’s Charming Trolley Car

The Santa Teresa trolley car, one of Rio de Janeiro’s postcard attractions, had an ...

Brazil Approves Purchase of Valtra by AGCO

U.S.-based AGCO Corporation, a global manufacturer and distributor of agricultural equipment, announced today that ...

Japan Ships Back to Brazil Over 300,000 Dekaseguis

Japan is planning to combat unemployment by sending back to their countries of origin ...