Brazil Presents in May Plan of Swapping Debt for Education Investment

Since March, professors at the Getúlio Vargas Foundation (FGV) have been studying Brazil’s initial proposal to transform part of its foreign debt into investments in education.

The faculty members are acting as informal consultants to the Ministry of Education, which intends to submit a debt conversion proposal to the Spanish government at a meeting in Madrid, May 10-11, between Ministers of Latin American countries and the Spanish government.


Brazil’s total foreign debt currently amounts to approximately US$ 210 billion (545 billion reais).


The FGV must define which of Brazil’s debts to Spain should be negotiated. According to Rogério Sobrera, professor of economics and finance at the FGV and coordinator of the project, the debt selected for the Brazilian conversion proposal should be on the order of US$ 1-2 billion.


After the debt is defined, two items will be negotiated: the amount of debt that will be discounted and the amortization rate that will be applied.


“If Spain accepts discounting US$ 100 thousand of Brazil’s debt, only a part of this, US$ 70-80 thousand, will be converted into educational investments.”


Moreover, the creditor will also have to approve the project on which the money will be spent.


The proposal is inspired by programs financed by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to convert the debts of highly indebted, poor countries.


Sobrera underlines, however, the differences in the case of Brazil. “We are not talking about a deal between friends. The creditor gains indirectly, because, as the country establishes more favorable development conditions, it should become a better partner for the creditor.”


The debt to Spain was picked for a variety of reasons, the most prominent being the greater ease in renegotiating debts with a single interlocutor – instead of dealing with various multilateral bodies – and the fact that Spain displayed its willingness to enter into this type of negotiation when it converted part of Argentina’s debt.


On April 27 the National Confederation of School Workers (CNTE) and other similar organizations will hold a demonstration in Brasí­lia in favor of this type of foreign debt conversion.


Translation: David Silberstein


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

At the OAS Brazil Reaffirms Stand Against Terror

This week, at the headquarters of the Organization of American States (OAS), in Washington ...

American Pilots Deny Any Wrongdoing on Boeing Crash that Killed 154 in Brazil

Over four years ago, in September 2006, a freak accident occurred over the Amazon ...

Portugal Invests Over Half a Billion Dollars in Brazil. A 49% Jump

Direct investment in Brazil from Portugal rose 48.9% in 2007 in comparison with the ...

Samba in the Kitchen

She has charmed the President of Brazil and Michael Jackson with her cooking. Hollywood ...

Brazil Wants Reduction of Fishing Subsidies to Rich Countries

The overexploitation of the fishing sector in the last years has caused a reduction ...

LETTERS

Investments into Brazil economy should reach $15 billion this year, almost as much as ...

Brazilian composer Braguinha

Brazilian Hit Maker Braguinha Dies Weeks Before Turning 100

Brazilian composer Carlos Alberto Ferreira Braga, Braguinha, one of Brazil’s most enduring and beloved ...

How to Become a Carioca

Postcards from Rio People are not pedestrians here, they are targets. Traffic signals are ...

US Inflation Brings Brazilian Stocks Tumbling Down

Brazilian stocks plummeted, in line with the U.S. market, as investors reacted to disappointing ...

One-Note Thought

I heard more than I saw, I bended my knees and almost on all ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`