A new UN report praised Cuba’s outstanding achievements in education and science on Wednesday, highlighting its medical efforts to combat the Ebola virus in several African countries.
The report also noted that Cuba is the Latin American country that devotes more than one percent of its Gross Domestic Product to higher education, with 4.47 percent, followed by Bolivia with 1.61 percent.
Cuba further remains the favorite destination for students from other Latin American countries, the report said. In the last five years alone, the Caribbean nation has hosted about 17,000 foreign exchange students in their higher education institutions.
In addition, Cuba ranks second in the region, after Brazil, in terms of numbers of doctoral graduates in scientific and educational institutions. This places the country of 11 million people at number 12 globally, according to the study.
While scientific research continues to be a man’s world, Cuba actually is one the rare countries to have closed the gender gap in this sector with 47 percent of women involved in science, particularly research.
The report further recognized Cuba’s progress in such sectors like the food industry, renewable energy and the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry.
Taken from http://www.cubasi.com/
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