Building on Colfuturo's announcement that its Programa Crédito Beca will forgo state funding from 2026 after two decades, President Gustavo Petro has detailed the program's unequal distribution favoring wealthier students, reigniting national debate on higher education equity.
The decision to halt government contributions—previously around 40-47% of the program's budget—marks a pivotal shift, as covered in initial reports. Colfuturo's initiative, Latin America's largest for overseas postgraduates, has enabled thousands of master's and doctoral studies abroad with total investments exceeding US$600 million.
Petro honed in on socioeconomic disparities, stating only 1% of resources reached youth from estrato 1, and 26% benefited estratos 1-3 (nearly 80% of Colombia's young population), while 74% went to estratos 4-6, including 41% to the top two despite their minority share. "This policy, classic in the mindset of the bankers running Colfuturo, is miserable," he declared. "This shows why Colombia is so terribly unequal, a country run by big bankers and hereditary families."
The president also challenged loan-based models: "Granting 90 doctorates a year with loans doesn't help Colombia. Only the rich can pay them; the poor end up dropping out or indebted, as happens with Icetex. Loans are not the way out."
Colfuturo highlights successes: 16,800 Colombians pursued studies abroad, with over 3,000 completing doctorates (1,803 directly, 1,462 post-master's). The foundation committed US$618 million, 53% from its own resources, and vows to sustain commitments while seeking new funding.
This episode underscores tensions in Colombia's push for inclusive advanced education amid deep inequalities.