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Lula's Education Program for Brazil: a Grim Comedy of Errors PDF Print E-mail
Written by Cristovam Buarque   
Monday, 30 January 2006 11:39

Brazilian schoolIn January 2003, when I was Brazil's Minister of Education, I suggested to President Lula and Communications Minister, Luiz Gushiken, that the first presidential speech carried nationwide over television and radio should commemorate the beginning of the school year. This would offer an opportunity to speak of the importance of that day.

To tell families that education takes place in school and also at home and remind them of the parents' important role in their children's learning. It would be an opportunity to explain the government program for education, reaffirm its commitment to the teachers, to greater federal participation in elementary and high school education, to ending illiteracy and to creating the National Fund for Basic Education (Fundeb).

Minister Gushiken made it clear that the matter did not deserve mention on the nationwide broadcast. In January 2004, no longer the Minister of Education, I made the same suggestion by means of a letter to which I received no reply.

In 2005 I also insisted upon the matter, as I am once again doing. But I have no illusions that the beginning of the new school year will be an important matter for the Lula government.

During all these years, Lula has, as a matter of fact, rarely spoken of education and, when he does mention it, he is referring to university or technical education. References to basic, K-12 education almost never appear in his speeches.

In 2004, I saw Lula's speech about poverty in China and was surprised that the word "education" did not appear a single time. I asked for a written transcript of the speech and verified that the word was truly missing.

In his first radio program of this year, however, Lula mentioned basic education, saying that its future depended upon the approval of Fundeb and that delaying this would be the fault of Congress. He delayed a long time before speaking about basic education and is now speaking about it mistakenly.

First Mistake: Making Congress responsible and calling for the rapid approval of a project that he tabled for two years. Fundeb was planned in the first year of the Lula government. When I was Minister of Education, I coordinated this planning and submitted a proposal at the end of 2003.

The President delayed and now he wants the Congress to approve - without debate, without improvement, as quickly as possible - that which he himself waited two years to send to the Congress.

Second Mistake: Saying that Fundeb will bring 4 billion reais (US$ 1.8 billion) more to basic education without adding that this will only happen around 2010. Lula did not say that Fundeb plans to apply only 1.3 billion reais (US$ 600 million) in 2006.

This appears to be a great deal of money to anyone who does not know that Brazil already applies a little more than 50 billion reais (US$ 22.6 billion) per year to basic education. Lula is proposing an insignificant increase: 15 centavos [US$ 0.07] per student per day of class.

Third Mistake: Not saying that the project proposed in 2003 planned to apply resources amounting to 4.3 billion reais (US$ 2 billion) beginning the first year, four times more than what is now being proposed.

Fourth Mistake: Not saying that allocating more money for education will do little good if not accompanied by other actions and proposals that are still tabled in the Presidential Palace of the Planalto.

The Ministry of Education is not a bank for the mere transfer of money. When the states do not repair their roads, the federal government intervenes.

When the municipalities set aside their commitments to education, the federal government merely transfers a little money and washes its hands of the children's future. Besides a Fundeb, the government needs to define a law of educational responsibility along the lines of the Law of Fiscal Responsibility.

It needs to determine national goals for all the schools in Brazil. To commit mayors and governors to accomplishments and not merely to more expenditures.

After three years of a hands-off approach to the matter, Lula spoke of basic education. But he mentioned two half-truths that together correspond to one immense illusion: that he is acting quickly and the Congress, slowly; and that the amount of money he is proposing is a great deal and sufficient to solve the crisis of Brazilian education, if the Congress will cooperate. Perhaps it may be a coincidence that 2006 is an election year.

But after three years it is legitimate to suspect that education, which was once scorned, will now be manipulated with electoral proposals.

And that is why the Congress has the obligation to hurry its analysis of Fundeb, but after improving what is wrong and incomplete in it. That is the opportunity that cannot be lost: Prolonging the approval or approving it urgently.

Urgency is necessary for education, but it is also urgent for Congress to educate itself.

Cristovam Buarque has a Ph.D. in economics. He is a PDT senator for the Federal District and was Governor of the Federal District (1995-98) and Minister of Education (2003-04). You can visit his homepage - www.cristovam.com.br - and write to him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Translated from the Portuguese by Linda Jerome - This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Comments (7)Add Comment
Lula.....
written by Guest, January 30, 2006


- is just the biggest manipulator, the biggest lier, the largest ever corrupted president, of Brazil recent history.

He is a crook. Just unfortunate that in his fourth year mandate...so many brazilian are still swallowing what he says.
...
written by Guest, January 31, 2006
Its true education is the future of Brasil but Lula is blissfully unaware, the country will fall behind the rest of the world. Brasil can not hope to compete with the manufacturing industry of the Eastern countries or the technological industry of India/EU/USA.

Hope he is not elected.
to the last forum member !
written by Guest, February 01, 2006

You forgot to name other countries.

In South Korea for example, 1 of the 24 countries recognized as developing country,
86 % goes to university.

In Brazil the number is only 10 % ! therefore even if in the next decade, Brtazil will double its percentage, the gap will remain wide...wide....wide....!

Here is what Mailson da Nobrega, brazilian, said :
"South Korea, for example, spends one-third of what it spends on education on pensions. In Brazil, the situation is the opposite, with pensions representing two and a half times the amount spent on education"

With such a differential in Brazil education....the gap will only widen...widen...widen...over time !
Even if Brazil doubles the education budget, the gap will widen at a less rapide rate...but still widen continuously !!!

Brazil will remain the farmers of the world.
And as everywhere in this world, only a small minority of farmers, the larger ones, will make good money and profits.
This means that it is guaranteed that 95 % of the Brazilian farmers will remain as poor as they have been during the last century.
Kelly Key-shase
written by Guest, February 03, 2006
smilies/sad.gif baita tristura
Mr. President
written by Guest, February 05, 2006
YOU ARE A f**kING MORON.

Brazilian People, how can you expect education from a guy who barely know how to sign his own name??

Educated people think therefore the government don't like thinkers, so we conclude that it is not in the best interest of the government to have even childreen thinking.

I said government as whole not just the "9 fingers"
That's it , fellas
lula is a failure
written by Guest, February 22, 2006
Yes , he (MR.Lula) can barely sign his name and is obvious that he did care much about his own education.Neverthless, he could have had a proper and realistic vision about how important and vital education is, at all levels , for the development of a country. He is an incompetent and ignorant human being it seems like.There is very good education in Brazil, for a small minority of people.Brazilians know that very well.It is something that should be offered for everybody, and it is not.We(brazilians) are composed of a very intelligent, clever , intuitive and creative people.Had the Brazilians good education as a whole , we would not be inferior to anybody else, in any area.Too bad corrupted governments with wrong politians run such gifted people! Let's hope for the future!
...
written by Guest, May 15, 2006

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