Brazil Wants to Convert Foreign Debt into Education Funds

In July, at a meeting in Spain, Brazil plans to present a proposal to convert part of the country’s foreign debt into investments in education.

The Brazilian Ministers of Finance and Foreign Relations will discuss options for this conversion with representatives of financial institutions, as well as the establishment of a benchmark to guide other negotiations.


The deputy executive secretary of the Ministry of Education, Jairo Jorge, judges that “the international atmosphere is favorable to this idea, because the world is aware of the importance of education to a country’s sustainable growth.”


The idea consists in applying on education funds that would be used to pay debts to other countries and multilateral organs (such as the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the International Monetary Fund), which hold nearly 20% of Brazil’s foreign debt.


Brazil’s foreign debt currently amounts to around US$ 200.4 billion (545 billion reais).


Proposals already exist for debt conversion on behalf of heavily indebted countries, such as Nicaragua, Ecuador, and Bolivia, but they don’t cover countries like Brazil.


According to Jorge, Spain’s initiative in pardoning 60 million euros of Argentina’s foreign debt demonstrated that countries that don’t belong to the group of heavily indebted countries are also in need of this kind of support.


The secretary says that there will be no stumbling blocks to negotiations with multilateral financial institutions.


“These organs already hold the view that education is not an expense but, rather, an investment.”


According to World Bank data, Latin America’s foreign debt was US$ 728 billion in 2002, 63% more than in 1990.


For the representative of the United Nations Education, Science, and Culture Organization (UNESCO) in Brazil, Jorge Werthen, indebted countries face difficulties in investing on social policies.


He says that the proposal to negotiate part of the debt does not jeopardize the country’s relationship with other creditors.


“Brazil has an excellent international image, and the world is convinced that it is necessary to make investments in education, science, and technology. The returns are very great.”


Translation: David Silberstein


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Children With AIDS Get Helping Hand from Los Angeles Foundation

Los Angeles-based Children Affected by AIDS Foundation (CAAF) announced its first ever international grant ...

Angra 3, Brazil's third nuclear plant

Brazil Comes Back to the Nuclear Table

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has given the green light to build ...

Al Jazeera's news broadcast

Al Jazeera and Brazil’s Bandeirantes Are Now Partners in News

An agreement recently announced between Al Jazeera TV, from Qatar, and Bandeirantes, a Brazilian ...

Good to the Last Grain

What makes the coffee growers of Mulungu so special is their history of resistance ...

Forecast for Brazil: 4.5% GDP Growth with 4% Inflation

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of Brazil should grow 4.5% this year in comparison ...

Brazil Sends Food and Foreign Minister to Help Solve Gaza War

Ambassadors and other heads of the 15 Arab diplomatic representations based in BrasÀ­lia, Brazil's ...

26% of Brazilians Over 10 Studied 3 Years or Less

According to the National Household Sample Survey (Pnad 2003), released yesterday by the Brazilian ...

Brazil’s Red Tape and Corruption Prevents It from Being Main Entry to Mercosur

All the bureaucracy and corruption the world knows about that plagues Brazilian life and ...

Brazilian Ruling Party, the PT, Wants to Control the Press and “Democratize Media”

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the former president of Brazil and the undisputed leader ...

Bolivia Pays Brazil for Oil Plants and Fines It for More than Buyback Price

Bolivia took control Tuesday, June 26, of two refineries it bought back from Brazil's ...