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Financialization and oligopolization of private teaching institutions in Brazil: the case of medical schools

There is a global trend towards the private sector’s growing participation in training healthcare professionals, influenced by public policies. In Brazil, private medical schools have developed and expanded with government financing, more recently with support from the More Doctors Program. The study aimed to describe and analyze movements in the corporate reconfiguration of the educational sector, with trends towards oligopolization and financialization related to the recent expansion of medical education in Brazil. An exploratory qualitative and quantitative approach was used, associated with various methodological strategies, to overcome the limitations in access to information, with data collection from open-access secondary databases. The private sector now accounts for 60% of the course supply and 69% of enrollment in medicine, 31% of which is supplied by ten educational groups. The groups studied here highlight the dynamic educational market, mechanisms of financialization and concentration, and formation of an oligopoly in the supply of higher education, particularly in medical training. There has been a trend towards concentration of the supply of institutions of higher learning since 2000. The largest groups employ similar management strategies, expansion of their market share, shareholder format, business diversification, and uptake of investors and financial capital. Government programs like the More Doctors Program helped expand and concentrate the private educational sector with government transfers or advance financing. The trend has been towards oligopolization and financialization.

Keywords:
Higher Education Institutions; Medical Schools; Health Consortia; Privatization; Public Policy


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