Germany: It’s more sensible to invest in education – Chancellor Merkel’s rival

Germany: It's more sensible to invest in education - Chancellor Merkel's rival
Schulz urgently needs to win back voters after a disastrous election loss on Sunday. Source: Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Social Democrat (SPD) rival promised on Thursday to raise spending on education in Germany to above the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) average in a bid to regain momentum before September’s national election.

Martin Schulz urgently needs to win back voters after a disastrous election loss on Sunday in Germany’s most populous state of North Rhine-Westphalia, the SPD’s third defeat this year and one he called a blow to the party and him personally.

In a speech in a library in the Berlin district of Neukoelln, where 14 percent of pupils leave school with no qualifications, Schulz set out one of his most concrete proposals since being chosen as leader in January.

He told the audience, which included teachers and pupils:

“Whoever doesn’t invest in education gambles away the chances for future generations. In education, we can do more.”

He cited OECD figures showing education spending in Germany was 4.3 percent of gross domestic product, below the 5.2 percent average in OECD member countries.

He promised to invest some €30 billion (US$33.4 billion) to surpass the average, without giving a timeframe.

Britain’s Labour Party’s promise to axe university tuition fees have struck a popular chord on the run-up to the country’s general election. Source: Reuters/Darren Staples.

Schulz, who failed to complete his secondary education and became a bookseller before working his way up through local politics, criticised Merkel’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble for refusing to spend his budget surplus on schools.

“It is more sensible to invest in education than having tax cuts or pouring double-digit sums into armaments,” he said to applause from the otherwise quiet audience.

Soon after being nominated as the SPD candidate to run against Merkel, who is seeking a fourth term after 12 years in office, Schulz dragged his party up some ten points to be neck-and-neck with the chancellor’s conservatives.

But his focus on social justice has failed to resonate and the SPD now trails the conservatives by about 8-10 points in most polls. The two parties are partners in a coalition government and many analysts expect the same alliance to emerge after the Sept 24 election.

Schulz, a former President of the European Parliament, also promised to extend full-day schools and have better coordination between central government and the 16 federal state governments responsible for education.

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