Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The unequal lag in Latin American schooling since 1900: follow the money

2010; Centro de Estudios Constitucionales; Volume: 28; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0212610910000066

ISSN

2041-3335

Autores

Peter H. Lindert,

Tópico(s)

Poverty, Education, and Child Welfare

Resumo

Abstract Focusing on education–income anomalies, in which a richer country delivers less education than a poorer country, seems a promising way to harvest a part of the rich history that does not lend itself to econometrics. To test the chain of alleged causation from unequal power and wealth to poor schooling, one must follow the public money, or lack of it, in as many contexts as the data will allow. Public funding for mass schooling is the hitherto untested middle link in the chain. The key to Latin America’s poor schooling was the failure to supply tax money, not gender discrimination or any shortfall in market demand for skills. The most glaring anomalies were the Venezuelan and Argentine failures to supply the levels of tax support for mass schooling that their high income could have afforded.

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