The Economist - USA (2021-12-18)

(Antfer) #1

28 TheAmericas TheEconomistDecember18th 2021


Portugueseforallgrades.Teachersearnbo­
nusesiftheirpupilshitminimumtargets.
Lessonplanspumpedoutbythecityen­
surethatnoteacherneedstarta classun­
prepared.Every teacher spendsa day a
monthintraining.
Not much of what Sobral has done
wouldsurprisereformersinrichercoun­
tries, says ClaudiaCostin, an academic
whousedto runRiode Janeiro’sschool
system.But that isnot thepoint. “The
beautyofSobral”,saysMsCruzofAllfor
Education,“is thatthey dothe obvious
thingsverywell.” Thecityhasadogged
willingnesstoimplement“whattheevi­
dencesaysworks”.
WhatmakesSobral’sstorymostcom­
pellingisthatithastouchedoffimprove­
mentsallacrossCeará.In 2006 bigwigs
fromthecitywereelectedtorunthestate
government. They, in turn, gave cities
morepowertoruntheirownschools.They
alsointroduceda statewideliteracytestfor
eight­year­olds,andincreasedtheamount
oftrainingandflowofmaterialstoteach­
ers.Mostnotably,theymadea bitofthe
moneyeachcitygetsfromthestatedepen­
denton improving school results. That
givesmayorsamplereasonto putsmart
typesinchargeofschools,andgivesother
officials cause to help local education
chiefssucceed.
Nostatehasseenschoolresultsriseas
fastasCearásincerigorouscomparisons
beganin2005.Thelatestdata,from2019,
sawseverallocalcitiessurgeupa national
ranking,evenasscoresinSobralitselffell
slightly. Twelve Cearan school systems
rankedamongBrazil’s 20 best(judgedby
theperformanceofprimaryschools).So­
bralslippedfromthetopspot,afterfour
yearsoftriumph.Thataccoladewentin­
steadtoMucambo,lessthananhourdown
theroad.Curiously,townsandcitiesthat
liejustacrossCeará’sborderswithother
stateshavealsobeencreepinguptherank­
ings,notesDanielSantosattheUniversity
ofSãoPaulo.

Newfrontiersbeckon.In 2018 VeveuAr­
ruda,whoservedasSobral’smayorfrom
2011 to2016,setupanorganisation—sup­
portedbytheLemannFoundation,abig
charity,amongothers—thataimstohelp
governments elsewhere in Brazil mimic
someoftheregion’sreforms.Oneofits
programmes involvesoffering advice to
governorsintenofBrazil’s 27 states.An­
other,whichprovidesmorehands­onhelp
tomunicipalgovernments,willsoonex­
pandtoaround 50 cities.
Not everyone thinks formulae from
Brazil’snorth­eastaresuretohelpschools
inotherregions.Sobralhasprobablybene­
fitedfromitsunusuallystablepolitics.The
samepoliticalcliquehasruncityhallfor 25
years.Theyhavekepteducationa priority.
ThecitiesworkingwithMrArrudaaread­
visedtoselectstrategiestheythinkbestfit
localconditions.Oneimportantthing,he
says,istocastoffa mindsetthat“poorchil­
drencannotlearn”.InSobralandtherestof

Cearáthatmeantdisregardingwell­mean­
ingobserverswhosaidthatdisadvantaged
childrenwereboundtolagatschoolunless
officialsfirstresolvedstubborn inequal­
itiesinincome.
ForallthateducationisprizedinSo­
bral,itsperformanceduringthepandemic
hasnotbeenglorious.Localleaderschose
tokeepschoolbuildingsclosedforjustas
longasdidofficialsinmuchworse­run
bitsofBrazil.“Wewerescared,”admitsIvo
Gomes,themayorsince2017.Pupilsmade
lessprogressthanusualwhilelearningon­
lineandfromworksheets,saysHerbertLi­
ma,thecity’seducationsecretary.Buthe
insiststhedeficitsarenotasdeepasthose
emerginginmanyothercities,andthatve­
ryfewpupilshavedroppedout.Sobral’s
schoolsarefarbetterpreparedthanmost
inBraziltorescuepupilswholagbehind
theirgrade.“Iknowtheycancatchup,”
saysthemayor,“becauseI haveseenthem
doit before.” n

Top of the class
Brazil, by municipality

Source:WorldBank

*IDEBscoreinprimary education
†Constant 2017 prices

1007550250 125
Cumulativespendingperpupil†
2013-17,reais,’000

Quality of education*
201, 10=highest
10

8

6

4

2

São Paulo

Sobral, Ceará

Ceará state Others

Rio de Janeiro

A


formercentre-leftpresident,
Michelle Bachelet, once belittled his
party. Yet Gabriel Boric, a 35­year­old
former student­protest leader, has a good
shot at being Chile’s next president. He
made a name for himself railing against
Chile’s highly successful economic sys­
tem and criticising the centrist parties
that have governed the country for most
of the time since Augusto Pinochet’s
dictatorship ended in 1990.
Now Mr Boric, whose radical coalition
includes communists, is leading opinion
polls ahead of the second round of a
presidential ballot set for December 19th.
After narrowly losing the first round last
month to a hard­right candidate, José
Antonio Kast, Mr Boric has turned to­
wards the centre to broaden his appeal.
He wrote to the Christian Democrats
asking forgiveness for his party’s “gener­
ational arrogance”. They endorsed him.
Ms Bachelet followed on December 14th.
Mr Boric has also invited centre­left
economists to evaluate his economic
programme. He now says he will raise
taxes by a whopping 5% of gdpin four
years, an initial step in his plan to raise
them by a crushing 8% in six to eight
years. His overhaul of pensions will be
implemented gradually (details remain
vague). He promises to stick to fiscal
consolidation and to stabilise public
debt. Earlier, he scrapped a requirement
for workers to occupy half the seats on
corporate boards.

Criticsdismissthesechangesas
cosmetic. Mr Boric still proposes to
abolish private pension funds, forgive
student debt, shorten the working week,
raise the minimum wage by half, in­
crease the state’s role in areas such as
telecoms and energy, and reserve at least
1% of government jobs for trans people.
Economists fear that introducing all
these measures together will harm
growth. Ignacio Walker, a former leader
of the Christian Democrats, also worries
that Mr Boric may not be able to restrain
his more radical left­wing allies. 
Still, Mr Boric appears to be convinc­
ing more voters of his moderation than
Mr Kast, a conservative Catholic who
defends Pinochet and opposes abortion
and same­sex marriage (which was legal­
ised in Chile on December 9th). Mr Kast
once proposed to eliminate the women’s
ministry and close the National Institute
for Human Rights; now he promises to
“strengthen” the former and “profoundly
reform” the latter. His critics decry the
fact that Mr Kast’s late father, a German
soldier, joined the Nazi party in 1942. 
The election remains wide open. A
quarter of voters are undecided. Who­
ever wins will struggle to pass sweeping
reforms: Chile’s Congress is divided and
the country is in the process of rewriting
its constitution, which could limit the
powers of the executive. Mr Boric may
soon learn that it is easier to protest than
to govern.

Chile’spresidentialcontest

Curb your extremism


As a run­off nears, candidates are moderating their radical platforms 
Free download pdf