Sustainable funding for education: Granada, SUMMA and GPE present a collaborative funding model in Washington to implement a national literacy policy
20 de April de 2026

The director of SUMMA, Javier González, travelled to Washington to take part in the IMF and World Bank Spring Meetings, which are held annually. As part of this event, he was invited to speak at the conference “Unlocking Skills for Life and Work in Latin America and the Caribbean. Partnerships to Transform Education”, organised by the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the Latin American Business Council (CEAL).
The aim of the meeting was to analyse how governments and the private sector can coordinate efforts and develop joint proposals to strengthen educational development in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The high-level event brought together ministers and ambassadors from across the region, education specialists and senior representatives from the organising institutions. González shared event with Grenada’s Minister of Education, David Andrew, providing an opportunity to discuss the national literacy plan that the country is promoting in collaboration with SUMMA, with support from GPE and the private sector.
The panel discussion entitled “Sustainable financing: smart spending” brought together leading experts alongside Javier González, including Suriname’s Minister of Finance and Planning, Adelien Wijnerman; the Director of Education at the Education Above All Foundation, Mary Joy Pigozzi; and the Executive Director of the People in the New Economy division at Systemiq, Liesbet Steer. The moderator was Fernando Regalía, Manager of the Social Sector at the IDB.
In his intervention during the first panel, Grenada’s Minister of Education, David Andrew, highlighted that the country’s government has partnered with SUMMA, KIX, and GPE with the aim of raising sustainable funding for foundational learning. According to the minister, this collaboration has enabled the mobilisation of significant resources to improve literacy practices.
Grenada’s national literacy plan, spearheaded by the country’s government in partnership with SUMMA, with support from GPE and the private sector, forms part of a commitment to literacy and educational transformation across the region, which originated with the Antigua Commitment to Literacy, launched during the KIX LAC Regional Meeting held in 2025, in Guatemala.





























































































































