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Sunday, September 18, 2016

Sound Familar? Mexico to Cut Educational Spending in 2017 | News | teleSUR English

Mexico to Cut Educational Spending in 2017 | News | teleSUR English:

Mexico to Cut Educational Spending in 2017



Overall investment in schools will fall below 5 percent of national income.  

The administration of Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto plans to deepen contested education reforms, by cutting spending for facilities improvements, equipment access, and teacher training, the Mexican newspaper La Jornada reported Sunday.
The Mexican government proposes federal-level cutbacks in 19 out of 23 programs for children and youths next year,
According to data from Mexico’s Center for Economic and Budget Research, also known as CIEP, spending earmarked for education in the 2017 budget is set to fall by 4.2 percent. Total educational spending represents 14 percent of the federal budget and 3.3 percent of GDP, which represents a reduction in educational investment historically. According to World Bank statistics, Mexico dedicated 5.1 percent of GDP to education in 2011, which was, at that time, more than the worldwide average of 4.53 percent of GDP.

A student receives lessons inside an old bus turned into a class room in the settlement of Pueblo Nuevo, Oaxaca.

According to numbers reported by La Jornada, some areas will be hit harder than others. Funding for the Education Reform Program is set to plunge by nearly 72 percent, while the Program for Professional Development for Teachers will take a hit of over 37 percent.
Other programs on the chopping block include initiatives aimed at bridging the digital divide, improving early childhood education, and developing infrastructure in the education system, among others, La Jornada reported.
The projected cuts to education spending come amid an ongoing conflict between dissident teachers and the Mexican government over education reforms, rolled out by government beginning in 2013. Striking teachers slam the reforms as “neoliberal” and argue that they do not account for unique needs of students and teachersin rural and Indigenous areas.
In recent weeks, some sections of the National Coordinator of Education Workers, or CNTE union, have opted to go back to classes after striking for about four months, while other sections have continued to protest the government’s refusal to overturn the disputed reforms.Mexico to Cut Educational Spending in 2017 | News | teleSUR English: