"There's been a tiny bit of madness post-Brexit vote, as though by one means or another NATO's gone, the trans-Atlantic partnership is dissolving, and each nation is surging off to its own corner. That is not what's occurring," Obama told National Public Radio.
Obama's remarks come as worldwide monetary markets recouped marginally on Tuesday after the stun consequence of Thursday's vote wiped a record $3 trillion off shares around the world. As yet, exchanging was unpredictable even as policymakers promised to secure their economies.
The vote additionally unleashed political bedlam, inciting the renunciation of Britain's PM, touching off instability about the rest Europe, and raising worries about vote based request in a period of globalization and rising populism.
U.S. authorities have said the American economy is sufficiently solid to withstand the "headwinds" taking after Brexit and promised to keep up its associations with the United Kingdom and Europe.
Obama, who has said he regarded the British voters' choice despite the fact that he had restricted the move, in the meeting on Tuesday said the vote has flagged that UK voters were responding to an European Union that was developing too quick and "without as much accord as it ought to have."
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"This will be a minute when all of Europe says, 'We should take a breath and how about we make sense of how would we keep up some of our national characters, how would we save the advantages of coordination and how would we manage a portion of the disappointments that our own voters are feeling,'" Obama said.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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