Time to Stop Crying and Start Working, Says Brazil’s Lula

“Brazil cannot squander and lose an exceptional opportunity to consolidate itself and rise above this plateau of emerging or developing country,” President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva told the dozens of entrepreneurs who attended the fifth anniversary celebration of the newspaper, “Valor EconÀ²mico,” at the headquarters of the Federation of Industries of the State of São Paulo (Fiesp).

According to Lula, the country is struggling hard to accomplish this. “Everybody knows how tough the Americans are in a fight. We don’t want to confront the Americans. I’m not crazy. What we want to do is to treat them the way they treat us,” he affirmed.


That, he added, is the only way for Brazil to attempt at least a tie “and not be blown off the field, as we always have.”


The President emphasized: “We have to stop regarding ourselves as the poor, unfortunate ones. Let us look for new markets.”


To illustrate his point, he mentioned the concern on the part of Brazilian entrepreneurs, especially in the textile sector, over the “invasion” of Chinese products on the Brazilian market.


Lula pointed out that this is not due to the recent alliance between Brazil and China, but, rather, to the 1994 Uruguay Round, which set the end of quotas for 2005.


“It is something that was done 11 years ago, and, if we haven’t prepared ourselves in the last 11 years, we will have to prepare ourselves now. Instead of standing around, crying, we must prepare ourselves,” he warned.


Lula recalled that the same entrepreneurs who used to defend fluctuating exchange rates now want the Minister of Finance, Antônio Palocci, to determine the quotation of the dollar.


He said that it is necessary to promote meetings with all the sectors that feel injured to help them seek new markets, improve the quality of their products, and reduce costs.


“What we can’t do is remain paralyzed, watching things happen, because we’ve seen this before,” he concluded.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil: Rio Grande do Sul Becomes Third State to Make Cell Phones

The Brazilian companies Teikon Tecnologia Industrial and Venko Telecomunicações signed  with the government of ...

Réveillon in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Iemanjá Is Waiting for Your White Roses on the Shores of Brazil

At the base of Corcovado mountain, about 100 men and women dressed all in ...

70% of Brazil’s Work Force Are Women and Blacks

Women represent 43% of the Economically Active Population (EAP), in Brazil, and blacks, 46%. ...

Taking shots and laughing in the Amazon

When the circus comes to town in the Amazon, it’s not only fun and ...

Lula Is No Disease, Just the Symptom of a Decaying Brazil

Brazil’s President Lula da Silva is immersed in a seemingly endless corruption scandal; his ...

Who’ll Care for Them?

Under ex-President Fernando Collor de Mello the indigenous health care system was decentralized. Since ...

In Brazil, PT and PCC, Government and Criminals Quote from Same Primer

My fears have been confirmed. São Paulo had a quiet Sunday. No bus was ...

Experts Call US$ 20 Bi Brazil-Venezuela Gas Pipeline a Pipe Dream

Petroleum and energy experts seriously questioned this week Venezuela, Brazil and Argentina’s project to ...

US Senator Defends UN Permanent Seat for Brazil

US Senator Norm Coleman, a Republican from the state of Minnesota defended Brazil’s entry ...

Ayrton Senna’s Legacy Has Touched Over 9 Million Brazilian Kids

This year’s Brazilian Formula One race was one of the most exciting ever. The ...