This Crisis Won’t Kill, It Will Only Make Brazil Stronger, Minister Believes

Brazilian minister Dilma Rousseff Dilma Rousseff, the Chief of Staff of Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, in confident that Brazil has instruments to face the international financial crisis and should not only survive the meltdown but also leave the situation stronger.

"We are going to leave stronger than we came in. This time, we have instruments, weapons and, most of all, the route and the answer. We have built the government's capacity to react in the face of the crisis. A reaction that, firstly, is sovereign, as we do not have to accept conditions from any monetary fund," said Rousseff.

The minister talked at the opening of the National Meeting of Mayors Elected through the Worker's Party, the party to which Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is affiliated.

According to Rousseff, the country currently has instruments to face the crisis, monetary policy, credit, financial reserves and solid public banks, which were not privatized.

"We have just terminated the vicious cycle that there was in Brazil. The crises that took place in the 1990s and early this decade, in 2001 and 2002, started abroad and contaminated Brazil through exchange. We were extremely fragile, we went broke and the IMF (International Monetary Fund) provided a recipe: reduce investment and social spending."

She pointed out that the measures announced on Thursday, December 11, offering tax breaks and credit for companies indebted abroad, were aimed at avoiding unemployment and at proceeding with the economic and social development of the country.

"We are not going to interrupt economic growth. If we do not manage, if we have no production, there will be unemployment. We must guarantee employment, which means maintaining the country and its different activities in operation," pointed out the Chief of Staff.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Over Half of Brazilians Get Middle-Class Status. In the US They Would Be Dirt Poor

The middle class in Brazil reached 51.89% of the country's population in April 2008. ...

Brazil’s Rousseff Comes Out Swinging Against the Economist and in Defense of Lula

The president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, once again repeated she would not be influenced ...

Ethanol and Hydropower Put Brazil on the Right Side of Development, Says UN

Innovative energy technologies and policies have placed Brazil in a good position to realize ...

Brazil’s New President Wants to Work Closer with the US than Lula

During US president Barack Obama visit to Brazil in March Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff ...

The Foolishness of Being Pro-American

Any anti-American lie, in Brazil, even an absurd one, is immediately taken as pure ...

Confessions of an Unarmed American Living in Brazil

On October 23, a Sunday, Brazilians will be asked to vote on the following ...

Santos port, in São Paulo, Brazil

Brazilian Exports Fall Close to 9% When Compared to 2006

Brazil's trade balance result (exports minus imports) in the month of March reached US$ ...

UN Chief Tells ‘Quiet Green Giant’ Brazil About Biofuel Perils

In Brazil, where he is in an official trip focused on climate change, UN ...

Whoever Becomes Brazil’s Next President It Won’t Be an Anti-Lula

As a cooling Rio summer sees the refreshing “March waters” clean the streets of ...

Fear in Bahia, Brazil, Is Emptying ATM Machines and Supermarket Shelves

Sunday, February 5, 2012. 7.30 am. A side road in a residential area of ...