The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The summary of FDR's planned response to this national crisis, outlining the issues he will address and the steps he intends to take to fix these issues is the following.
During his inaugural address as President of the United States on March 4, 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt gave a strong declaration about the issues he was about to handle as the US President. He outlined the plan for approaching the complicated economic situation.
First, he invited the American people to not have fear although the situation was complex. He said that fear paralyzed people and impeded thinking and action.
Then, he clearly affirmed that the priority of his administration was putting people to work. He said that the situation was going to be treated as an "emergency of a war," and the government would be the first to hire people.
He said that agriculture was going to be a priority., that the federal government would provide the most efficient use of land and the correct people to work the farm fields.
That is how President Roosevelt tried to face the contingency and came up with the creation of the New Deal; a series of federal programs aimed to help the poor and unemployed people in the United States, and a series of legislation to accelerate the recovery of the economy.