
U.S. media believe that the new president will face at the beginning of his three major economic problems, that is to save the U.S. economy and rebuild the damage to the financial system, a clear trade policy. "The Wall Street Journal" said that the economic downturn is the number one challenge. Former International Monetary Fund chief economist Kenneth Rogoff said: "The United States in a deep recession in the shadow of the new president took office, will be the same as the present situation is as bad or even worse." While most economists do not think it will be a repeat of the Great Depression, but the U.S. economy into a recession is almost inevitable, and the extent of the recession may be the 1980s, the most serious. U.S. economists and politicians generally in favor of the next president be able to quickly clarify its position next year officially on January 20 by the White House before the show to save the economy. U.S. Senate Banking Committee, Democrat Christopher Dodd said that the new president should be elected within a few days started the selection of the key post of finance minister, at the same time the formation of economic policy team. The new president's second challenge is to rationalize the relationship between the government and the market. In the last large-scale government intervention and other financial institutions in the field of private capital, the new government with the need to balance the market. McCain camp attacked Obama is "socialist", apparently in order to raise large enterprises and financial capital as represented by market forces, wary of Obama's. The new government intervention in the market as well as efforts to handle standard, the U.S. financial system will determine whether the ashes still devastated. The third challenge is trade policy. Compared to McCain, Obama on trade issues with a more "protectionist" color, tend to re-examine the other countries with trade agreements. Obama came to power after the United States and other countries could increase trade friction. Britain's Barclays Capital analyst Rodrigo Malang Ge Ji Yi Shi believes that Obama's victory in the short term, together with the strength of the Democratic Party in Congress, the new government will be more motivated to respond to financial crises; but in the long run, oba Ma took the White House may be inclined to expansionary fiscal policy and trade protectionism.

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