Brazil Opposition’s Presidential Candidate Calls Mercosur Farce and Barrier

José Serra José Serra, Brazil’s leading presidential candidate described Mercosur as a “farce” and a “barrier” for Brazil to sign trade agreements with other countries. “To keep carrying the burden of this Mercosur in its current condition is senseless. The customs’ union is a farce, except when it is used to impede, to block”, said Serra during a meeting with leading businessmen from the state of Minas Gerais.

Press reports from Belo Horizonte indicate that the opposition candidate and former governor of Brazil’s powerhouses, the state of São Paulo, said that the group made up of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay “has become a barrier for Brazil to sign trade agreements with other countries”.

Serra has been a regular critic of Mercosur and its “cumbersome procedures”.

Presidential candidate for the main opposition party, Brazilian Social Democracy, PSDB, Serra last April 10 talking at his official nomination, complained bitterly that Mercosur after almost two decades only has one free trade agreement, with Israel.

In his nomination speech Serra promised a complete reformulation of Brazil’s foreign trade policies. “We have reserves but investors look at the stock and the influx of foreign capital. We must be ready to anticipate events”, insisted Serra.

However the candidate leading in the opinion polls for the presidential election of next October 3 did not anticipate what would be his administration’s position towards Mercosur, of which Brazil is the main economy and one of the founding members in 1991.

According to a report in the financial newspaper Valor, the former governor recalled an experience of the past to support his criticism of Mercosur.

While minister of Health in the cabinet of former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1995-2002), Brazil and India were ready to sign a trade agreement but the initiative was frustrated because compensations had to be established for the other three full members of the block, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.

Serra is competing with Dilma Rousseff the incumbent candidate handpicked by President Lula da Silva. His former cabinet chief and energy minister, Ms Rousseff however has a past linked to the radicals of the sixties and seventies and is looked upon with certain suspicion by the business establishment.

She has on her side the unbeatable prestige and reputation of president Lula, but it’s not sure if it will be enough.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Let Me Share with You Two or Three Things About Us, Brazilians

Whenever you deal with foreigners – for business or pleasure – it is wise ...

Brazil Creating Export Credit Agency, the Brazilian Eximbank

Brazil's Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade and the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) ...

After Camping for Close to Three Years, Landless Get Land in Brazil

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s agenda today in Porto Seguro, in the ...

Brazil participates in Dubai's Gulfood fair

Brazil’s Beef, Poultry and Fruit Present at Dubai’s Gulfood Fair

One of the greatest food industries in Brazil, Avipal group, is going to participate ...

Agrarian Reform Now! Land Concentration Dehumanizes Brazil

The concentration of land in Brazil continues to be among the highest in the ...

Brazil Is Recovering Its Railroads, But It’s a Long Hard Road

Brazil’s railroad sector is recovering its dynamism, assured the president of the National Rail ...

Brazil Reiterates It Will Reach Oil Self-Sufficiency in 2005

Petrobras – Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. – reports that although it will not reach its ...

Wallerstein on Brazil’s Surge and the Decline of the US Empire

In the course of his visit to the Southern Cone of South America, the ...

Air France Jet Didn’t Explode, Says Brazil

Spread over more than 90 km (56 miles) of ocean debris from the crashed ...

Brazilian singer/actress Karina Barros

Florida Premií¨re: A Brazilian Maid Not Made to Work

Picture a successful married couple, both doctors, who hire a Brazilian, Portuguese-speaking maid who ...