O que é este blog?

Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

Meu Twitter: https://twitter.com/PauloAlmeida53

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Mostrando postagens com marcador Shanghai. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Shanghai. Mostrar todas as postagens

quinta-feira, 26 de dezembro de 2019

Shanghai, em todo o seu esplendor


So many ways to welcome 2020

Hu Min
 Shanghai Daily, 18:50 UTC+8, 2019-12-26       
Bell ringing, climbing events and lantern festivals are some of the ways to celebrate the arrival of 2020, the Shanghai Administration of Culture and Tourism said on Thursday.
Bells will be rung at Longhua Temple in Xuhui District at midnight on New Year's Eve, a traditional way to celebrate the new year in China. Bronze bells will be struck 108 times in a ceremony that many believe can absolve sins and bring good luck.
Visitors can eat noodles and hang wishes on a tree at Longhua.
The Oriental Pearl TV Tower in the Pudong New Area will host a climbing event on the first day of the new year, as climbing high on New Year's Day signifies a good start to the year.
A run will be held at the Dishuihu Lake area to usher in the first sunshine of the New Year, and similar events will take place at Sheshan National Forest Park, Shanghai International Resort, Mingzhu Lake Park and Shanghai International Circuit.
Donglin Temple will also be hosting bell-ringing and climbing events.
Shanghai Tower will host an electronic music party on New Year's Eve, while Jinjiang Amusement Park will stage a light show, parade, lion dance and float show.
The China Maritime Museum will host Jiangnan sizhu (string and wind music) and gong and drum performances on the first day of the new year, together with intangible cultural heritage experiences involving Jinshan farmers' painting, model ship making and wood block printing.
A maritime-related intangible cultural heritage exhibition will also be held.
In Jinshan District, a 24-hour celebration will be held from 12pm on December 31, featuring seafood hotpot banquets, lucky draws, firework shows, and dragon and lion dances.
The Guangfulin Lantern Fair will feature around 40 lantern groups, and a 3D mapping show and projection show are also part of the display.
Shanghai Songze Archeological Site Museum will host a lantern making event on the first day of 2020, while Oriental Green Land is organizing a number of cosmos experience activities such as a fulldome digital movie and VR and AR experiences on January 1. 
Fengjing ancient town will stage traditional water town wedding rituals and hanfu (traditional Han clothing) displays on the first day of 2020.
Source: SHINE   Editor: Cai Wenjun



quinta-feira, 26 de dezembro de 2013

Saudades de Shanghai - Best museums, segundo o TIme Out Shanghai

Eu sempre escrevo Shanghai, em lugar da versão aportuguesada Xangai, que não reflete a combinação de ideogramas do termo original.
Em todo caso, para rememorar os tempos em que vivi na cidade, coloco aqui uma informação sobre os melhores museus da cidade, segundo o Time Out Shanghai.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Shanghai's best museums

Our guide to the 14 must see museums in Shanghai

Shanghai's best museumsGlass blowing lessons at the Shanghai Museum of Glass
First published on 9 Aug 2012. Updated on 18 Oct 2013.
Be a tourist in your own city as Time Out presents your guide to the best museums in town
Shanghai natural history museum

14 Shanghai Natural History Museum

Yanan Dong Lu, Huangpu district, 5RMB
The Natural History Museum is one of Shanghai’s forgotten museums. Housed in a 1920s building (the city’s former cotton exchange), the museum’s three floors of exhibits have been largely neglected by both staff and visitors, though reports that the museum is set to move to new premises in Jingan Sculpture Park next year have seen a small increase in interest.

Until then, the current space provides an opportunity to experience a museum from yesteryear – exhibitions consist almost entirely of rows and rows of wood and glass cases filled with taxidermy and models.

Entering through a beautiful wood and tile-clad entrance hall, you’re greeted on the first floor by the 22-metre long skeleton of a giant Mamenchisaurus (a long-necked dinosaur from the late Jurassic Period), whose bones were discovered in Sichuan province. The rest of the first floor is given over to explaining the evolutionary processes that led to homo sapiens and, in a side room, two preserved Ming dynasty bodies discovered near Xietu Lu and Dapuqiao in the early 1990s.

English language captions are limited (both in quality and quantity) on the first floor, but disappear altogether on the second and third levels. Here, the animal kingdom is represented with preserved specimens and models ranging from butterflies to giant turtles. Alas, condensation on the cases, peeling plaster and stained floors are common.

The museum’s endless rows of display cases can feel repetitive, but it’s worth the 5RMB entry fee to see those dinosaur fossils looming among the fading period architecture. One to check out on a lunchbreak rather than plan a day around.

Must-see The Mamenchisaurus and the various dinosaur skeletons at its feet.

Shanghai Natural History Museum260 Yanan Dong Lu,near Jiangxi Lu.See full address details

13 Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Centre

People’s Square, Huangpu district, 30RMB
Much of the Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Centre can be skipped. Aside from the odd interactive ‘fly over’ of parts of the city and some interesting then and now photos, there are few exhibits that you can’t pass by.

Must-see The enormous scale model of the city on the third floor is the main reason to come here. Occupying almost the entire floor, the model is surrounded by visitors pointing excitedly to their homes (unless they live in the very outer reaches of Putuo or Minhang that is) and other familiar landmarks. The sheer scale of it all is worth the 30RMB entrance fee alone.

Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Centre100 People's Avenue, near Huanhe LuSee full address details.

Shanghai museum12 Shanghai Museum

People’s Square, Huangpu district, Free
Shanghai Museum has easily one of the most impressive collections of historical artifacts in the country. The trouble is, the sheer quantity of it is overwhelming. As important as they are, entire rooms given over to calligraphy or coins can be wearing for even the most ardent history buff.

Fortunately, the museum has been free since waiving its entry fee in 2008 and this allows for quick visits. Good for a few hours, but, ultimately, the Shanghai Museum proves that bigger isn’t always better.

Must-see The fourth floor’s collection of traditional ethnic minority costumes can feel a bit tokenistic following all the Han-dominated history below, but it also offers a refreshing burst of colour when you get tired of looking at yellowed scrolls.

Shanghai Museum201 People's Avenue, near Huangpi Bei LuSee full address details.

11 Shanghai Municipal History Museum

Oriental Pearl Tower, Pudong, 35RMB
Another often overlooked attraction, the Shanghai Municipal History Museum in the base of the Oriental Pearl Tower provides a whistle-stop tour through ‘old Shanghai’ via an array of scale models and waxworks. Iin contrast to the numerous lifeless waxwork displays at museums across the city, here visitors are free to clamber into the mock street, shop and bar scenes for photo opportunities. fact, taking photos seems to be the main draw (there’s even a green screen room where you can have your picture superimposed onto old city scenes). The museum is fairly information-light, but the models of opium dens and courts keep things interesting for a few hours.

Must-see As impressive as the models of The Bund and Nanking Lu in the 1930s are, our favourite section is the walk-through area of neon-lit massage parlours and bathhouses from the same period, which show just how far Shanghai has come.

Shanghai Municipal History Museum1 Century Avenue, near Lujiazui Ring RoadSee full address details.

10 Matchbox and Brand Museum

Changfeng Park, Putuo district, Free
Just around the corner from the Jackie Chan Museum – which we’re starting to doubt will ever open – the Matchbox and Brand Museum celebrates Shanghai’s business and advertising legacy with displays of classic ads, old packaging and, in particular, vintage matchboxes.

Shanghainese pride is on full display as collections of old biscuit cans, insect repellents and Shanghai lady posters chart the progress of the citys’s branding industry from the Qing dynasty to modern day. Along the way there are tributes to Shanghainese businessmen such as Yang Jichuan (the ‘King of the electric fans’) and Zhu Baosan (the ‘King of cooking oil’).

The building itself is worthy of note, too. One wall is decorated to look like a giant matchbox, while the entranceway is propped up by two enormous match pillars. The rolling grounds on the north bank of the Suzhou Creek (the museum is part of the creekside area’s significant redevelopment in recent years) also make for a pleasant stroll, as does the fantastic Changfeng Park just across the road.

Must-see
 The best exhibit is left until last. On the third floor, there’s a technicolour sea of matchboxes, arranged in rows by country and province that blur the line between art and commodity.

Matchbox and Brand Museum251 Daduhe Lu, near Yuanling Dong Lu.See full address details.

9 Shanghai Jewish Refugee Museum

Changyang Lu, Hongkou district, 50RMB
Between 1937 and 1941, Shanghai received over 25,000 Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazi regime in Europe. Most were housed in Hongkou district and this recently revamped museum set in the Ohel Moshe synagogue tells their story through photos, detailed captions and eyewitness accounts from former residents.

Understandably, it’s a quiet, somewhat solemn place, but the exhibits are clear and carefully arranged and the historical value of the building and its exhibition is hard to overestimate, especially given the destruction of numerous historical sites in the surrounding area in recent years.

Must-see Once you’ve finished touring the museum itself, head out onto the adjacent Zhoushan Lu. This beautiful street lined with terraced houses is one of the few places left in town where you’ll regularly find locals playing carrom, a raised table-top game which involves using snooker-like cues to shoot small pucks into pockets around the edges of the table.

Shanghai Jewish Refugee Museum62 Changyang Lu, near Zhoushan Lu.See full address details.

8 Chinese Imperial Examination System Museum

Nanda Jie, Jiading district, 20RMB
A museum about exams might not be the most exciting of prospects for an afternoon out, particularly when visiting involves a trip to Jiading district, but the Chinese Iimperial Examination System Museum, part of the Jiading Museum complex beside Huilongtan Park, is actually far more interesting than it may sound. True, the English language captions are limited (‘paper for cheating’, for example, does little to enhance your experience of looking at a Qing dynasty cheat sheet), but there are some interesting displays.

The Iimperial Examination System, which began in the Sui dynasty in 605AD and continued until 1905, is explored via the usual museum staples of waxworks, scale models and displays of various artifacts, mostly from the Qing dynasty. The central exhibition hall also features a section on the international influence of the Chinese Iimperial system and features a quote from an 1888 edition of The Westminster Review stating that China’s approach deserves ‘termless laudability’.

Must-see One of the main reasons to visit the museum is its setting. Housed in a Confucian temple, the grounds and gardens are almost as interesting to explore as the exhibits themselves.

The museum is at its best when the two combine – such as in the recreated outdoor examination cubicles where scholars would spend nine days in the hope of making the grade for the civil service.

Chinese Imperial Examination System Museum183 Nanda Lu, near Tacheng LuSee full address details.

The Shanghai Gallery of Antique Music Boxes

7 The Shanghai Gallery of Antique Music Boxes

Oriental Arts Centre, Pudong, 50RMB
One of the city’s many decidedly niche museums, this hidden room within the Oriental Art Centre has a surprisingly broad appeal. Guided tours are led through the small room and its fascinating range of mechanical music players and though the tours are in Chinese only, there’s plenty for non-Chinese speakers to enjoy.

The world’s oldest music box (a tiny gold object made in 1796) is here, as are music boxes made to look like birds in cages, music boxes operated by sitting on a chair and music boxes shaped like pistols. Most of the exhibits are Swiss-made and while a music box musuem may sound bizarre, you can’t help but marvel at the mechanical wizardry and skilled craftsmanship on show.

Must-see Towards the end of the tour, you’re given a demonstration of a remarkable moving sketch artist model, which is more like a mechanical puppet than the small trinket boxes that may come to mind.

Shanghai Gallery of Antique Music Boxes425 Dingxiang Lu, near Yingchun LuSee full address details.

6 Shanghai Postal Museum

Bei Suzhou Lu, Hongkou district, Free
Housed in a beautiful 1920s building which was formerly the city’s China Post headquarters, the Shanghai Postal Museum is worth a visit to see the architecture alone. Particularly impressive is the cavernous central hall, which is filled with replicas of postal vehicles and features a model of China’s first regular air mail plane hanging from the ceiling.

Tracing the evolution of the postal service (from messages scrawled on tortoise shells in ancient times, to the present day), the exhibition within is informative rather than riveting. There are a few highlights along the way however, such as letters from the Postal Commissioner in 1911 venting his anger at posties’ unacceptable behaviour including cycling around town with their shirts unbuttoned, smoking on the job and delivering mail late. How times have changed.

Elsewhere, extensive collections of stamps and relics such as Qing dynasty post boxes can only divert your attention for so long, although the ‘Future Cinema’ provides a memorably bizarre opportunity to see how the people behind the museum believe the post will evolve.

Must-see The real reason the Shanghai Postal Museum is so high on our list is its tranquil rooftop garden. Perched atop the building is a small seating area and patio. Here, beside the museum’s baroque tower decorated with telecommunication cables and figures of Eros and Hermes, you can enjoy sweeping views down Suzhou Creek towards The Bund and over to Lujiazui. It’s one of the best free views in the city.

Shanghai Postal Museum276 Bei Suzhou Lu, near Sichuan Bei LuSee full address details.

5 Shanghai Museum of Glass

Changjiang Xi Lu, Baoshan district, 20RMB
One of Shanghai’s newest museums, the Shanghai Museum of Glass is also one of the most impressive. The exhibitions of ancient and contemporary glassworks on display include some stunning specimens, but it’s the building itself that has made it one of our favourite museums in town.

Set in a huge former glass-making factory, the museum’s interior is like a cross between a house of mirrors and David Bowie’s lair in Labyrinth. Walking through the museum’s numerous rooms feels disorientatingly like you’re inside one of the artistic glass objects that it displays. The building is a work of art in itself.

Must-see In a large, open industrial space at one end of the museum, regular glass-blowing classes are held. You’ll need to book ahead and it’ll cost you 300RMB/30 minutes, but it’s a unique experience.

Shanghai Museum of Glass685 Changjiang Xi Lu, near Gangsi LuSee full address details.

4 Shanghai Museum of Public Security

Ruijin Nan Lu, Xuhui district, Free
Few of the captions feature any English here, but plenty of the exhibits, such as the row of old police vehicles that line the entranceway or displays of small spy cameras, are enjoyable nonetheless. Following the development of the city’s beloved public security forces since they were founded back in 1854, the museum is certainly worth a few hours of your time.

Rows of guns and knives sit beside models of Tilanqiao Prison (built in 1902 and still operating in Hongkou district) and waxworks of various foreign concession police officers. It’s perhaps not the most child-friendly display, but it is an interesting one for adults.

On the third floor, things get really grown up. Here, the ‘Criminal Iinvestigation’ section features 1,000 exhibits detailing various murder cases and some of the evidence. Displays include grisly items such as a human skull impaled with a scissor blade along with graphic photos from murder scenes including that of a man axed repeatedly over the head.

Must-see Also on the third floor, the collection of weaponry – from knuckle dusters, to sawn-off shotguns and even pistols carried by Sun Yat-sen – is oddly fascinating.

Shanghai Museum of Public Security518 Ruijin Nan Lu, near Xietu LuSee full address details.

3 Shanghai Animation Museum

Zhangjiang Hi-Technology Park, Pudong, 30RMB
Bringing together Chinese animation classics such as Shanghainese waif San Mao and Western favourites such as Jessica Rabbit (pictured above), the Shanghai Animation Museum is a kid-friendly museum that can easily occupy an afternoon.

Both Western and Chinese animation histories are retold with opportunities to watch early cartoons such as Steamboat Willie, the first animation film with sound. Some of the more static exhibits and the frustrating amount of displays at adult eye-level may mean certain areas need to be skipped if you’re with very young children, but generally there’s plenty to keep them entertained. We recommend you skip the 3D cinema on the third floor however.

Must-see The second floor features the most interactive section of the museum. Sand drawing and cartoon tracing activities are available, but the real highlight is the clay moulding station where (from as little as 10RMB) you can recreate cartoon characters in ceramics.

Shanghai Animation Museum69 Zhangjiang Lu, near Guoshoujing LuSee full address details.

2 Shanghai Science and Technology Museum

Century Avenue, Pudong, 60RMB
Although in some of the less interactive areas, Shanghai’s mammoth Science and Technology Museum can feel a touch dated, in general it’s one of the best museums in the city and provides easily enough entertainment to fill an afternoon.

Immediately inside the second floor entrance, you’ll find the Animal World. The main exhibit in this section consists of a large, open room full of stuffed and model animals with a seeming emphasis on the predatory nature of the animal kingdom (growling, screeching attacks are found among each region’s display). Video screens, informative bi-lingual captions and binoculars are helpful touches and, aside from a pathetic attempt to portray Australasia’s animal world (which appears to be more of an animal hamlet here), the exhibition is generally well done.

Once through this first room, you’re offered a trek through the rainforests of Yunnan, complete with dozens of plastic trees, running waterfalls, rickety wooden bridges and some oversized insects. Dotted throughout is the occasional live specimen, but Animal World is very much dominated by models and taxidermy.

After this, things get much more interactive. Iin the east wing, the World of Robots offers the opportunity to compete against machines at Go and archery. On the next floor up, the Space Navigation area features a ‘tetraxon balancer’ where you’re strapped into a spherical machine and spun upside down at various angles. Around the corner is an opportunity to test the Coriolis effect by shooting balls at a target as you rotate in a giant, boat-like craft, while next door in the Human and Health area, you can take penalties against a computerised goalkeeper and ride through the human body in a piece of fruit car.

Skip the central Iwerks 4D cinema, which is a let down considering the extra 30RMB entry fee. Otherwise, this remains one of the best museums in the city.

Must-see The easily missed Light of Wisdom area, on the first floor, is like a big playground with all manner of fun games and ‘experiments’. Specially weighted bicycles that help you ‘dance on a rope’, games controlled by your concentration and exhibits for you to shoot at, hit and ride, make for an entertaining section.

Shanghai Science and Technology Museum2000 Century Avenue, near Jinxiu LuSee full address details.

1 Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Centre

Huashan Lu, Xuhui district, 20RMB
Yang Peiming, founder of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Centre, acquired his first ever propaganda poster by mistake. ‘Iin 1995, a friend asked me to get some Shanghai lady posters,’ he says, ‘but ended up with the wrong kind of poster.’ Since then, Yang has collected over 5,000 Chinese propaganda posters from between 1949 and 1979. Having displayed them in the hidden basement of a nondescript Huashan Lu tower block since 2008, Yang was finally given official recognition for the museum earlier this year.

The collection, which Yang prefers to view from an art point of view rather than from a political one, features numerous examples of vitriolic, xenophobic messages alongside Communist slogans and colourful displays of China’s power and technological advancement. There is also a collection of the Shanghai lady posters that Yang was originally supposed to buy over 15 years ago.

Yang, who will happily guide visitors around the basement rooms in English and Chinese, has been asked to provide works from his collection for international galleries such as the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and says that ‘no one in the world has as big a collection as Ii do.’ Iit’s a fascinating, important collection and an absolute must-see museum.

Must-see Tucked away in one corner toward the back of Yang’s basement exhibition area is a small room sectioned off from the main hall. Displayed here are some of the most sensitive materials in Yang’s possession – hand-written and painted denunciation notices that were posted on university campuses during the height of the Cultural Revolution.

Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Centre868 Huashang Lu, near Zhenning LuSee full address details.

 

domingo, 15 de dezembro de 2013

Quer andar de carro em Shanghai? Sua placa vale mais do que o veiculo...

Incrível, mas verdadeiro: se você quiser não só possuir, mas usar um carro em Shanghai, saiba que a sua placa valerá mais caro do que o seu carro. Trata-se portanto de um grande investimento.
Não sei se as autoridades de trânsito da cidade permitem a negociação de "títulos" desse tipo nas bolsas, mas, se isto for permitido, depois dos leilões, os mercados secundários de placas de veículos poderiam alcançar valores estratosféricos. Só bilionários acabariam possuindo carros na cidade...
Vejam vocês mesmos...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Car plate prices rise at year’s last auction

Shanghai’s car plate prices rebounded slightly yesterday at the year’s last auction before a rigid price ceiling mechanism comes into force next month.
The average price of a Shanghai license plate rose to 76,093 yuan (US$12,532), up 376 yuan from last month. The lowest winning bid increased 500 yuan to 76,000 yuan, the Shanghai International Commodity Auction Co said.
The price went up moderately with the number of bidders which increased 3.7 percent to 39,625.
It was the second price hike since April when the price ceiling mechanism was unveiled to cool down the market hype.
Just like last month, the auction had an upward limit of 74,900 yuan — the weighted average of average prices in September, August and July — imposed on the first-round bids and offered 8,500 car plates for sales.
The two-month imposition of the same limit was caused by a more than 6 percent price hike in October, the first month when the price ceiling mechanism experimented with a flexible mode, which officially ends this month.
Starting from next month, a more rigid price ceiling mechanism will come into effect.
The city government has announced a unified 72,600 yuan ceiling for car plate auctions throughout 2014.
The price ceiling mechanism, which successfully brought down the Shanghai car plate prices from its record high of more than 90,000 yuan in March, has proved effective in  leading market expectations.
Under its guidance, the average prices often ended up a little above the upward limit for first-round bids, which are used as a gauge for second-round bids.
By fixing the upward limit, the government may be able to keep the price in a predictable range, said Eddie Zhang, a car dealer in Shanghai. “The price trend is largely determined by people’s expectations of it. If their expectations are stable, then there won’t be any big fluctuations on the market.”
But considering there are some new auction factors to be taken into consideration, it will take some time for the new expectations to build up, he added.
Though the total number of car plates up for sale next year is set at 100,000 — almost the same as this year — the monthly supply was specified well ahead of time for the first time.
In January, April and September, 9,000 plates each will be sold ahead of the holiday demand, and about 8,000 plates for the rest of the year.

domingo, 6 de novembro de 2011

Paulo Roberto de Almeida em Mandarim: educacao na America Latina

Recentemente, dei uma longa entrevista, por telefone e em inglês, a um jornalista chinês, Xingfu Zhu, do jornal de Shanghai Wenhui Daily. Não sei exatamente o que ele captou como informação.
O tema era a educação em países da América do Sul, que conheço apenas por leituras e visitas ocasionais para seminários acadêmicos.
Em todo caso, aqui vai a entrevista tal como publicada em chinês, seguida da tradução feita pelo Google, e portanto meio bizarra, para não dizer completamente deformada. Mas algo se pode reter.


Global window of Shanghai Wenhui Daily

Wave of student protests in Chile intensified
Neighbors began to reflect on their own system defects
South American countries:  "every family has its own problem" so far as education is concerned
Published on 2011 -10-21    Authored by  Xingfu Zhu of Shanghai Wenhui Daily


智利学生抗议浪潮愈演愈烈 邻国开始反思自身制度弊端
南美国家家家有本难念的教育经

日期:2011-10-21 作者:朱幸福 来源:文汇报


图片作者: 
图片作者: 
图片作者: 
图片作者:


本报首席记者 朱幸福

(...)

(本报巴西利亚10月19日专电)

Global window of Shanghai Wenhui Daily

Wave of student protests in Chile intensified
Neighbors began to reflect on their own system defects
South American countries:  "every family has its own problem" so far as education is concerned
Published on 2011 -10-21    Authored by  Xingfu Zhu of Shanghai Wenhui Daily

Photo by:
The newspaper's chief correspondent Xingfu Zhu 
    
    Since yesterday, the Chilean university student organizations to hold another two-day national protest, asking the Government to carry out major reforms in education, but to protest the government's negotiations with the students appeared rupture. Chilean President Peinie La [Sebastian Pinera] said, to calm the increasingly violent student protests, the government will not hesitate to act in accordance with an emergency security law.

Chile student protests have continued for 5 months now and the government has not yet reached any compromise. How should it treat the student movement in Chile? This long-running student movement in what direction the future development? South American countries like Chile, is there a higher education issues and challenges? 
To this end, the reporter visited the University of Brasilia Center, Professor of International Political Economy Paulo Roberto de Almeida and former Brazilian Minister of Culture Jeronimo Moscardo.

Chile - the political driving force behind the student movement
    
Almeida: Behind this student movement has a left-wing parties and trade unions in Chile's complex background, they use the student movement and the right-wing government led by President Peinie La rival. Peinie La Chilean right-wing parties on behalf of the President, advocating a market economy and privatization. Look at the student protest movement in Chile, one must distinguish between what is real education, which is Chile's left-wing parties and trade unions in the background waves. Currently, Chile is about two shares of political forces around the student movement against each other, do not give. Analysts here believe that the student movement in Chile, the trend may be gradually moving towards the development of radical and violent, political forces behind the contest will only end in the next general election through the ballot to decide.

As we all know, Chile is Latin America's economic model, a very high degree of openness of its economy, currently 80% of the world's economies signed a free trade agreement. Chilean government's economic management is also very good, in the 1990s, annual economic growth rate remained at 4% -6%, and low inflation, fiscal balance, known as the Latin American region "little tiger." According to the World Economic Forum evaluation report, Chile's economic competitiveness in Latin America ranked first, the world number 30.

Bad luck is that Chile's devastating earthquake in February last year, total direct economic loss of one-tenth of the gross domestic product. Has more than 20 billion in assets Peinie La president came to power in March last year started well, just waits to be held in Chile on the occasion, erupted in Chile this year, domestic large-scale student movement. Chile's education system is really lagging behind, with its global economic competitiveness is not commensurate in many places for improvement. However, the student movement in Chile too much violence associated with the color, the student movement has been the trade unions and leftist parties around, so that the education complex and politicized. Chile's market economy, from government to provide scholarships for students from poor families is necessary, but the student movement asked the Government to provide free education for all students, free lunch and transportation, how is this possible to do so.

Argentina - is now a hundred years ago the best regression
    
Almeida: Compared with the adjacent Chile, Argentina's economy and education in Latin America 100 years ago is the best, economic strength and quality of education comparable to Europe, France, Italy and other countries. Before the outbreak of World War I in 1913, Argentina's equivalent of the U.S. 70% of national income, now shrunk to 33% of the United States. Throughout the 20th century most of the time, the quality of education in Argentina is very good. However, Peronism in Argentina destroyed the economy and education. President Peron in the 1970s created a "union republic", the radical labor movement as a tool of political manipulation of President Peron, trade unions organized a strike in order to improve benefits often strike, Argentina's economic strength and quality of education was deteriorating.

Moscardo: Argentina's high level of education, high rates of highly educated population, the country engaged in academic research particularly large number of intellectuals, many Argentines have won the Nobel Prize. However, Argentina's academic education too much, quite far away from practical application. Because Argentina has too many college-educated intellectuals, people have too many ideas and positions, it is difficult to manage this country the government can not solve the many problems facing the country and crises. Brazil, on the contrary, highly educated population ratio in Brazil is relatively low, in the small number of pure academic research, it is easier to manage the Brazilian government.

Moscardo: Most of Chile's elite higher education in the United States, by the American "cultural imperialism" a great influence on government ministers are basically trained at Harvard University's elite. Opposite the University of Brazil, Brazil is not the best university education in Latin America, mainly the Portuguese colonialists left the problem, they do not want to Brazilians in the political control of their own. Brazilians are now in charge of their own university education, the university's influence began to increase. University education in Brazil the main problems currently facing is the increasing commercialization of university education, many large companies running the university, the university education as an industry to support, they need only to train personnel, university education seriously out of line with the national interest.

Brazil - "iron rice bowl" to reduce the quality of education
    
Almeida: Brazil today there are some very good public and private universities, such as some church-run universities and University of Sao Paulo, etc., but in the northern mountains and the Amazon region, some of the poor quality of university education. University education in Brazil today, the biggest problem is the weak teachers. Country has two million -300 million teachers, only half can be class, other teachers can only work in the administrative bureaucracy. In the class teacher, the professor who eat a "big pot", regardless of your level of education, we get the same wages, arouse the enthusiasm of the teacher's teaching is not up, the quality of education students worrying.

University education in Brazil caused by eating "iron rice bowl" of the main reason is that the education sector there are strong trade unions, some of them are in Brazil called "triad." The number of public university teacher income, not by the school, but by the trade unions have the final say. Brazilians pay taxes to the government, then the money sent to the Brazilian government at all levels of trade union organizations across the country, the teacher's salary is controlled by the trade unions. Trade unions in Brazil is now becoming a very popular industry, as long as the Department of Labor registered, you can get money from the government. Today, the Brazilian trade union monopoly of all schools, while other unions have opposed. Lerner insured Rover Education Brazil education law deeply influenced by extreme leftist ideas, people believe that egalitarianism and nationalization, against profits and capitalism.

On general education, primary school children in Brazil, only 50% of the students and secondary education. When the Brazilian high school students graduated from school, only about 15% of the people to go to college. Most private universities in Brazil, but in private universities, students from poor families to pay 200-2000 riyals per month (1.7 riyals equivalent to one U.S. dollars) tuition, very expensive, and the children of the rich more state universities, tuition is entirely free, this phenomenon is very unreasonable. Decline in the quality of education in Brazil, coupled with long-standing practice in this country, "de-industrialization" policy, as a constraint to enhance the global competitiveness of this country one of the obstacles.

In the South American countries, Peru's education, there are two extremes of good or bad. Hispanic Peru has a very good job, live in comfortable houses, mostly well-educated people. But in Peru, 60% -70% of the population is indigenous, living in the Amazon basin or the mountains, where the quality of education is poor. Peruvian Spanish is the official language of the law, while the Indians inhabited the promotion of bilingual education. However, the Indians received the right track in terms of education there is still a lot of obstacles, the Government of Peru to promote bilingual education and reduce inequalities between whites and Indians continue to face enormous challenges.

(Filed from Brasilia  on October 19)