this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2025
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In Brazil the public university sector is much more valued, but also ironically more restrictive than the private one. So you have upper middle-class (or very lucky poor) people who can get public education and get great job opportunities afterwards, and the majority either having no higher education or taking loans for lower quality private degrees.
Though the tuition fees are nowhere as offensive as the ones in the US. Besides that, our equivalent of a trade degree is a technical or professional degree, which is usually at max 2 years of training. It makes for good employment opportunities and many public institutions offer it for free. I think the main problem with the US is how commodified education is in general.