Brazil President Urges Obama to Take Swift Action to Alleviate US Crisis

US President Barack Obama American president-elect Barack Obama needs to act swiftly to solve the economic crisis, said Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva speaking before the country's Economic Development Council in Brazilian capital BrasÀ­lia.

Lula said that Obama "who has won elections with an unprecedented display of political strength in the history of the US, will have to address immediately the US crisis, he must act swiftly to avoid things getting worse."

Nevertheless he hoped "it won't take longer than one year to solve the crisis," because if the crisis lasts longer, "US citizens will start to blame him for their financial woes."

"Now the blame is on the current administration, not in a year's time, but I think Obama is sufficiently intelligent to act quickly and avoid the crisis from spreading further," said the Brazilian president.

However Lula was also quoted saying that the worst of the global financial crisis was over and Brazil now needed to prepare for after the crisis.

Economy minister Guido Mantega also underlined that Obama must act fast if he is to avert "a deep recession," although the "critical phase" of the financial crisis is over, "there's light at the end of the tunnel."

Obama is in a similar situation and with the same challenge as President Franklin Roosevelt in 1933 when he took the country in the midst of the depression that begun in 1929, "but Obama has an advantage: the US economy still is not in a full fledged recession; his challenge is how can he recover the US economy, but fast."

President Lula da Silva also said he hoped a G20 meeting of Finance ministers this week in São Paulo, in southeastern Brazil, would help a little to resolve the global financial crisis.

Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the world's 20 leading economies will meet in Brazil's largest city from Friday to discuss new regulations for the global financial system.

Brazil wants emerging countries to have a bigger role in the governance of global financial institutions.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Officials and Exporters Discuss Red Tape and Other Nuisances

Brazil promotes today and tomorrow, November 22 and 23, the 27th National Foreign Trade ...

G4 Meets at Brazil’s Embassy in London to Discuss UN Reform

On Friday night, July 8, Germany, Brazil, India and Japan made progress in their ...

Brazil Resumes FTAA Talks with the US

This month Brazil reopens negotiations with the United States over the creation of the ...

Braziiiiiiiiiil

How could something as apparently benign as a team sport become the greatest unifying ...

At Eve of Brazilian Elections Lula’s Aide Resigns Charged with Dirty Campaigning

A special advisor to Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has resigned his ...

For the First Time, Brazilian Indians Have Chance to Shape Own Policy

Brazilian Indians themselves will show the way to a better Indianist policy. According to ...

Drought Cuts Brazil’s Soy and Corn by 20%

Brazil’s soy and corn are the crops that have been hardest hit by drought ...

Digital TV: Japan Sweetens Deal and Brazil Seems Poised to Go Japanese

The Brazilian Minister of Communications, Hélio Costa, rebuffed criticism that he was "messing up" ...

Brazil Has a Promising Future in Biofuel

Biofuel production offers a "window of opportunity" for rural development, especially in Brazil, Ignacy ...

70% of New Companies Fail in Brazil

Between 2000 and 2006 726,600 companies were established each year, in average, in Brazil. ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`