Archive for the ‘Israeli Economy’ Category
The Time for Aliyah – Immigration to Israel – Has Come
Written by Marty Roberts on July 28, 2010 – 9:55 am -Marty explains why aliyah-immigration to Israel from Western, democratic countries is SO important right now…And why it’s also good for YOU, Brother Jew!…
And…Corruption in the current Israeli elections…Another reason help is needed to save Israel’s fledgling democracy…
Also…Great economic news from the Holyland…Now economics is not a reason to stay in exile, is it?…
Plus….A cure for the bird flu from Israel…But will it work on German cats?…All this and MORE…
A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
CLICK PLAY Button to Listen to “The Marty Roberts Show”
Aliyah

Do it for yourself…
Do it for Israel and your Jewish brethren…
Aliyah

If you read the Torah/Bible/Five Books of Moses/Old Testament, you can’t help but notice the centrality of living in Israel for Jews…
Maybe it’s EASIER to ignore it…
But it’s NOT the TRUTH, is it?
Tzachi HaNegbi

Speaking of the TRUTH…
Not too much of THAT coming out of these guys mouths…
We’re talking about Israeli parliament members being indicted for felonies…
Like THIS guy!
A bit of “Western Aliyah” can change this trend real fast…bring the values of TRUE democracy to Israel with you when you come!
Tags: aliyah immigration, bird flu, democracy, economy, elections, israel, Tzachi HaNegbi
Posted in Aliyah, American Jews, Finance, Health, Israeli Economy, Israeli Parliament (Knesset), Jewish Science & Technology, Judaism, Life in Israel, Podcasts, Politics, Religion, Science and Technology, Torah and Bible | No Comments »
Israeli Teenage Tennis Sensation Shahar Pe’er Reaches New Heights in France
Written by Marty Roberts on July 16, 2010 – 12:55 pm -
Israeli Teenage Tennis Sensation Shahar Pe’er Reaches New Heights at the Roland Garros French Open…
In a dramatic 3-set loss to former world champ Martina Hingis, Pe’er still made Israel and the Jewish People proud…
A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
Marty tells you more about this incredible young Israeli rising star…
Also… a Swiss study says that Israel has a great economy…Worth checking out…
Plus…Sumo wrestlers chow down in Tel Aviv…
And…Clinton writes another book…This time it is about public service…Hmmm…
All this and MORE…
CLICK PLAY Button to Listen to “The Marty Roberts Show”
Shahar Pe’er

This 19 year old Israeli is shaking up the woman’s tennis world…
She made a great showing at this year’s Roland Garros French Open, almost defeating former world champion Martina Hingis…
“You Go (young) Girl!”…
Tennis in Israel

It has always been a big sport, with the likes of Amos Mansdorff and Anna Smashnova (no, really) leading the way as international stars…
I think that we are headed for even bigger and better things on the world tennis scene…
Sumo Wrestlers

No, this is NOT them visiting Tel Aviv, although there ARE 15 Japanese Sumo wrestlers making quite a stir in Israel…
They are here to promote Japanese tourism to Israel…
Bill Clinton

He’s signed another book deal for millions and zillions…
It’s something about servicing, and the public, on which he considers himself an expert…
Tags: israel news, israel tennis, martina hingis, shahar peer, sumo wrestlers
Posted in Europe, France, Israeli Economy, Israeli Tourism, Jewish People, Life in Israel, Podcasts, Sport, United States | 2 Comments »
Stanley Fischer-New Governor of the Bank of Israel, and Double Suicide Bombing in Cairo
Written by Marty Roberts on July 12, 2010 – 9:57 am -America Takes over The Bank of Israel…But First, Stanley Fischer Became Israel’s Newest Citizen!!!
Also…Huge Strides Towards Woman’s Equality in the Middle East and Around the World…For Better or for Worse???-YOU Be the Judge!!!
A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
CLICK PLAY Button to Listen to “The Marty Roberts Show”
Israel’s Newest Citizen–Stanley Fischer

He takes the helm of The Bank of Israel today, after acquiring his Israeli identity card
Muslim Husband-Wife Suicide Team in Cairo


The family that blows up together grows up together???
How nice that the Islamic-Jihadist terrorist organizations are giving women every opportunity to participate in the carnage
If 70 virgins await the “shahid”-murderer in Muslim heaven, why do the women want to join them, anyway???
New Love-Cocktail???

I’ve heard of a drink called a “Grasshopper”…
But a “Frog Love Potion”????
Where do you get those tickets to Lima, Peru???
Marty Roberts tells all!!!
Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better (including, unfortunately, rape)


So says the Norwegian feminist from her jail cell after being the first woman convicted of rape in that egalitarian country…
Bare-foot and pregnant no-more!!!!
Mazel Tov to the Happy Young(??) Couple(??)

Elton John and his fiance, David Furnish, plan on following in the footsteps of the “other” Royal couple…
Elton says he wants to make an honest man of his significant “other”…
The venue of the un-holy act remains uncertain…
Tags: cairo, elton john, israel, marty roberts, stanley fischer, suicide bombing
Posted in Aliyah, American Jews, Arts, Celebrities, Egypt, Entertainment, Finance, International, Israeli Economy, Jewish Holidays, Jewish People, Middle East, Palestinians, Podcasts, Politics, Scandinavia, South America, Terror, Terrorism, United States | No Comments »
My Oncologist is in Jail Today…But Israel Health Care is STILL the Best
Written by Marty Roberts on July 11, 2010 – 9:51 am -Did dollar (shekel?) signs get the best of this fine doctor?…We’ll hold off on judgment until the tribal council speaks…
And…A look at Israel health care…How does the Israel health fund system work? (pretty darn great, thank you)…What are the pluses and minuses of this system?…And what about drugs?…
Plus…The colon cancer patients are staging a hunger strike…They want drugs…NOW!…A new political matzah ball in Israel…
All this and MORE…
A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
CLICK PLAY Button to Listen to “The Marty Roberts Show”
My Oncologist Won’t be Doing THIS for Awhile

He was just arrested…
He’s being charged with taking bribes and breach of trust…
“Physician, do no harm!”…
He Might be Doing THIS Instead…

Can’t do too much healing from here…
I hope it’s all just a big mistake…
But, if not…
I hope he pays the price of greed…
Not to mention his violation of the Hippocratic oath
Drugs

Colon cancer victims are on a hunger strike in Jerusalem…
They want and need more drugs…
Drugs that just may save their lives…
But the government cannot afford to supply everything to everybody, can it?
What about life and death?
Avastin – Magic Bullet for Colon Cancer?

This colon cancer-fighting drug is not yet a benefit of the Israel health care system…
Just not enough clinical trials to justify its use, yet…
They promise to include it ASAP…
Where do we draw the line?
Tags: colon cancer, health fund, israel health care, israel news, oncologist
Posted in Health, Israeli Economy, Life in Israel, Medicine, Podcasts, Science and Technology | No Comments »
Terror in Jordan:Al-Zarquawi Brings Suicide Bombing to Jordan
Written by Marty Roberts on July 9, 2010 – 11:41 am -The death toll is at 65+ and counting…
When will the world respond appropriately to Islamic terror?…
And…The Yitzhak Rabin Memorial Festival Season Continues…
Ad Nauseum…
How many times per year do we have to memorialize and re-hash the assassination?…
Also…You Can Attend a Clinton Double Feature in Israel…
It will only cost you $100,000…
Plus…European Islamic revolution, King Abdullah of Jordan, Condoleeza Rice & Co.,
the Weizmann Institute and GREAT news for Israel’s economy
A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
CLICK PLAY Button to Listen to “The Marty Roberts Show”
Abu Musab Al-Zarquawi

This smiling guy in the one responsible…
65+ dead and counting…
As terror bombing hits King Abdullah’s Jordan…
Where next?
Pick a (free western) country, any country…
Bank of Israel Governor
Stanley Fischer

Fischer issued a revised economic growth forecast for Israel…
It’s looking up for 2006…
Gross domestic product=4.3% growth…
Exports=6.5% increase
Investment=4.5% growth
Business sector employment=3.5% increase
Not bad…
The Weizmann Institute
Rehovot, Israel

“#1 University in the world for Life Sciences”
Not bad…
Tags: abdullah, al-zarquawi, fischer, hillary clinton, israeli economy, Jordan, Terror, weizmann, yitzhak rabin
Posted in American Jews, International, Israeli Economy, Jewish People, Jewish Science & Technology, Jordan, Life in Israel, Middle East, Palestinians, Podcasts, Science and Technology, Terror, Terrorism, United States | No Comments »
Marty Highlights Some Pretty Surprising Products from Israel
Written by Marty Roberts on July 7, 2010 – 10:21 am -Marty Highlights Some Pretty Surprising Products from Israel…Singing and Flying…Military to Musical
A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
Click Play Button to Listen to “Marty Highlights Some Pretty Surprising Products from Israel”
A weird and controversial entry to the Eurovision International Song Competition, and an incredible unmanned surveillance vehicle…Plus…International Women’s Day in Israel…The Israeli Army’s Fighting Females…Also…Verse 9:11 from, where else?…The Koran…All this and more on “The Marty Roberts Show”…
Tags: Aliyah, israel life, israel news commentary, Judaism, marty roberts, Religion, surprising products
Posted in Aliyah, Education, Islam, Israeli Economy, Jewish People, Jewish Science & Technology, Judaism, Life in Israel, Podcasts, Religion | No Comments »
Is Israel Now Another Victim of Abuse by the United States?
Written by Marty Roberts on July 6, 2010 – 12:35 pm -A classic post and podcast from the archives!!!
Is Israel Now Another Victim of Abuse by the United States???…
Why does Israel cringe like a beaten child every time the United States raises its voice???
And…Rain During the Festival of Sukkot…
What does the Talmud have to say about That???
Plus…The JSF Project – minus Israel, of course, and the US gets involved in Israeli zoning laws…
CLICK PLAY Button to Listen to “The Marty Roberts Show”
An Abuse Victim Cringes…
And Seeks to Blame Her(Him)self

Why does America’s best friend, Israel, act this way towards her closest ally, the US?
Does the US have the right to dictate how Israel conducts her business?
Do our interests ALWAYS have to be 100% “in-sync” to be able to work together successfully, as the good friends that we are?
Does any country have the right to tell another sovereign country where her capital can be located?…Where she can build housing for her citizens?
The Joint Strike Fighter

Why is the US freezing Israel out of this vital, strategic defense project?
Is France a closer American ally than Israel?
I doubt it…
The World’s Jews Are Living in Sukkot (booths/tabernacles) This Week

We bare our human vulnerability to The Master of the Universe…
We display our total dependence and trust in our Creator…
We do this by exposing our lives to the elements…
So, What Does it Mean When Rain Falls on Our Temporary Dwellings???

The Talmud has something to say about this…
Something about spilling wine…
Marty Roberts explains…
Tags: israel, jsf, kabbalists, marty roberts, podcast, radio, sukkah, sukkot, talmud, victim of abuse
Posted in Israeli Economy, Jewish Law, Judaism, Life in Israel, Podcasts, Religion, Torah and Bible, United States | No Comments »
Israel Becomes a Full Member of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
Written by Marty Roberts on May 12, 2010 – 4:28 pm -This week, Israel was formally accepted as a full member in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD. Israel is now one of only 34 advanced countries with robust economies that participate fully in searching for answers to global challenges and establishing standards in many technical, economic and social arenas.
Of course, the Palestinian Authority, whose economy is almost totally dependant upon Israel, attempted to block Israel’s entry into the prestigious international body.
Fortunately, as usual, they failed…Fortunate for Israel…Fortunate for the palestinians, as well…Whether they know it or not…
Netanyahu: Entrance into OECD a Great Day for the Country
“This is a great day” for Israel and for the economy, Netanyahu said after the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) unanimously accepted the Jewish State as a member. The Palestinian Authority suffered a rare political loss in its unsuccessful bid to thwart Israel’s bid.
Reprinted from Israelnationalnews.com Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Israel had been concerned that Norway and Sweden, which strongly support Palestinian Authority demands for becoming a new Arab state within Israel’s borders, might try to block the Jewish State’s bid, but they sided with other member nations in favor of its entry. The OECD stated, “Israel’s scientific and technological policies have produced outstanding outcomes on a world scale.”Israel’s acceptance is another feather in the Prime Minister’s “economic hat” that he has been wearing since being Finance Minister in the Sharon government. He won wide praise for bringing the country out of the economic doldrums and into a period of unprecedented growth and stability.
The OECD granted Israel “observer status” more than a decade ago, and its efforts to win the coveted position as a full-fledged member culminated Monday. Estonia and Slovenia also were accepted, bringing the total OECD membership to 34 countries.
The new additions “will contribute to a more plural and open OECD that is playing an increasingly important role in the global economic architecture,” OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said.
“This new chapter in the history of the Organization confirms our global vocation as the group of countries that search for answers to the global challenges, and establish standards in many policy fields such as environment, trade, innovation or social issues,” he added.
The new status formalizes Israel’s change from an “emerging” market to a developed market, which has significance in the financial world. “Over the years, the economies of all OECD countries have benefited in one way or another from the transformative effects of OECD membership,” the organization noted.
It said that “will shortly publish an Innovation Strategy to provide policy makers with a comprehensive and cross-cutting policy guidance package setting out the priorities for structural reforms that can accelerate innovation-led growth.”
Proposed reforms will be aimed at combating corruption as well will assuring high standards of corporate management and narrowing gaps in income among sectors.
Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz commented, “The announcement of Israel’s accession to the OECD is a mark of respect for the Israeli economy.” He said that the OECD “is the most respectable international club a small state like Israel can be accepted into. From what we know about other states, in the years following the acceptance there is a rise of billions of dollars in foreign investments in the state accepted.”
A formal ceremony welcoming Israel, Estonia and Slovenia is scheduled at the annual meeting of the OECD Council at ministerial level on May 27 in Paris.
The Palestinian Authority had told the OECD that granting Israel membership would mean “accepting its occupation of the Palestinian territories.”
Israel’s OECD bid also faced resistance from within Israel. Member of Knesset Ahmed Tibi urged OECD members not to let Israel in, arguing that Israel discriminates against its Arab citizens.
Tags: israel, Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.oecd
Posted in Finance, International, Israeli Economy, Life in Israel, Palestinians | No Comments »
In Spite of Global Financial Crisis…Israel’s Economy Continues to Be Strong…Growth Predicted for 2011 As Well
Written by Marty Roberts on May 7, 2010 – 12:40 pm -In spite of the economic meltdown taking place right now in Europe…In spite of the stock market collapse on Wall Street in the US yesterday…Israel’s little old economy keeps on tickin’…
Conservative banking regulations and an innovative hi-tech sector…good old “Jewish Sachel”…an economically savvy leadership, headed by MIT economy-educated Benjamin Netanyahu, assisted by Bank of Israel’s Mega-financial brain, Stanley Fischer…A formula for a successful, growth economy that continues to prove itself year after year, even in the face of worldwide economic crises.
Yeah, Israel…
Fischer: EU crisis mildly impacts Israel
Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer said Wednesday that Israel was likely to weather the European economic crisis, and be only lightly affected by it
Reprinted from Jpost.com
Fischer told the Knesset’s Finance Committee that although the dramatic drop in the value of the Euro and the slowdown in the European economy would impact exports to Europe, those may be offset by improved exports to the US. However, if the crisis engulfs the US, which he deemed unlikely, it would be cause for major concern, said the BoI governor.“Suddenly” the Greeks discovered “the economic data they had been using was wrong. Their deficit stood at 13 percent rather than five. Their fiscal policy was extremely irresponsible, their debt-to-GDP-ratio was 130%,” Fischer said. “Their economy was in deep crisis and they could no longer finance their over-generous budget.”
Fischer also gave his economic forecast for the year 2011, saying the central bank expected a growth rate of 4%, and was updating the forecast for 2010 to 3.7%.
He favorably compared Israel’s unemployment rate to that of the US, which rose from 5% to 10%. Israel’s unemployment rate was just under 6% and are now near 8%.
Speaking before Fischer, Knesset Finance Committee chairman Moshe Gafni opened the session by attacking the detractors of government support for Yeshivot because they are economically unproductive. Gafni said he would go through the budget item by item and see what outlays were economically productive. “Over 60% of the budget is uneconomical,” he told the committee.
“Was the Kibbutzim debt arrangement economical? Are the dramatic subsidies to agriculture? What about the settlements? I will even say the investment in development towns isn’t economically worthwhile.”
“This is an ideological issue,” Gafni said. “Zionism and civics classes are ideological. I’m all-out opposed to the view that only what is economically productive should be included in the budget. It should be taken off the public agenda.”
Gafni also spoke about the low employment rate among the ultra-orthodox, saying, “I have said and will say again it is not the haredim who do not want to go to work, it is the state that does not want them to work, it lies when it says it wants them to work.”
Tags: bank of Israel, crisis, economic, economy, financial, israel, stanley fischer, world
Posted in Finance, International, Israeli Economy, Life in Israel | No Comments »
An Israel That Is Energy-Independent…Realistic Future, or Crazy Fantasy?
Written by Marty Roberts on April 13, 2010 – 2:55 pm -An American energy expert is predicting an “oil and gas rush” in Israel. Wouldn’t THAT be something!…Especially after Israel gave up the huge oil reserves in the Sinai in the trade of land for peace with Egypt, even though it was Israel that won the war. (What other country would have made THAT sacrifice in the interest of peace, by the way?)
How cool would an energy-independent Israel be?…
The Messiah will probably not be far behind…
Israel to become center of new ‘oil and gas rush’
A top US energy industry expert believes Israel is going to soon experience an “oil and gas rush” by major Western energy development companies.
Reprinted from Israeltoday.co.il
Speaking to the Israeli financial newspaper Globes, Fred Zeidman said the recent discovery of a massive natural gas field off Israel’s Mediterranean coast had drawn the attention of every major Western energy company.Israeli companies Delek and Isramco have already tapped the natural gas field, together with British energy giant Noble Energy. Zeidman noted that quite often, “as soon as Noble goes to a place, many other companies follow in its wake.”
That could mean an enormous economic boom for Israel and its transformation overnight into a major international energy exporter.
The natural gas field in the Levant Basin (the western Mediterranean) is estimated to hold 122 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas, making it the largest natural gas resource ever found. The area is also believed to contain at least 1.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil.
Tags: energy, israel, natural gas, oil
Posted in Israeli Economy, Life in Israel | No Comments »
Israel’s Economy continues to Boom…Just Imagine If…
Written by Marty Roberts on April 7, 2010 – 10:23 am -The Israeli economy continues to thrive and grow, even in the face of the world economic crisis. I have often pointed out, and will continue to do so…Can you begin to even imagine the accomplishments that this tiny little country Israel could achieve if we didn’t have to spend SO much of our human and economic (not to mention emotional) resources fighting terror and daily threats to the existence of the Jewish State.
I can dream, can’t I?
Our economic success story
While world struggles, Israel’s economy reaches another milestone
Reprinted from Ynetnews.com Sever Plocker
Without you realizing it, Israel is approaching yet another milestone en route to turning into a highly developed economy – our per capita GDP will reach the $30,000 mark this year, likely at the beginning of the summer. The overall gross domestic product, which is the economic value of all the goods and services produced in Israel, will reach roughly $230 billion.Israel fully reached the $20,000 per capita GDP mark only in the first half of this decade. We did it slowly and hesitatingly; the deep recession during the second Intifada curbed economic growth and pushed the economy backwards.
Reaching the $30,000 per capita GDP mark reflects to a small extent the increase in real national income in shekels, and to a large extent the shekel’s strengthening against the dollar. Yet this does not detract from the accomplishment. For many years, the shekel has been traded in foreign currency markets below its real purchasing power.
We can address the $30,000 GDP mark as yet another statistical figure; just another fleeting figure. Yet we can also look at it as a starting point for a leap in the coming decade. The Israeli economy’s state at this time is exceptionally good: Other economies whose per capita GDP is similar to ours – Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Britain just to name a few – sustained harsh blows during the financial crisis. They will dedicate the coming years to licking the wounds and attempting to extract themselves from the abyss of deficit and debt. Their recovery will be slow.
Window of opportunity
This is our window of opportunity. While in most developed and industrialized states are weakened and bleeding, while their government budgets skyrocketed, Israel is strong and in good health. In six of the seven leading industrial powers, the ratio between government debt and GDP is expected to grow by dozens of percents in the coming years. The debt will reach 90% of the GDP in Germany, 96% in France, 100% in Britain, 110% in the US, 130% in Italy, and 250% in Japan. In Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Ireland, the ratio is expected to stabilize somewhere between the 100% to 150% mark.
Yet in Israel, the opposite is expected to happen: Government debt is expected to go down to only 70% of GDP, with the decline starting as early as this year. The budgetary plan presented to the government by Foreign Minister Yuval Steinitz is a pipe dream for most finance ministers in developed countries.
Israel’s new comparative advantage is prominent in many areas. The Irish government, for example, announced last week a national rescue package for local banks, at a total cost of 80 million Euros. The British, French, and American governments are close to imposing special taxes on financial institutions, in order to fund at least some of the assistance handed over to them during the crisis. Yet in Israel there’s no need for it. Israel’s banking system overcame the past two years without taking a penny from the government.
Ambitious target
Late into his tenure as finance minister, Benjamin Netanyahu presented an ambitious target for Israel: Joining the list of top 10 or 12 richest economies in the world. Is this target realistic? Based on today’s perspective, the answer appears to be “yes.” In order to join the group of truly wealthy states, Israel needs to reach the $40,000 per capita GDP mark. To that end, our economy must grow at an annual rate of 6.5% in the next six or seven years, assuming that the shekel exchange rate won’t shift much from its current level of about NIS 3.6 per dollar, and that our population will grow by 1.8% annually.
This isn’t impossible; the target can be reached. In the years 2003-2008, Israel’s economy grew at an average annual rate of 5.5%, with a less convenient starting point and with two wars in the middle.
So what can the accelerated growth in the coming years be premised on? What are its possible engines? Here they are: Tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox men joining the workforce, boosting the production of Israeli Arabs, improving the quality of education and employment in outlaying areas, massive investments in physical and educational infrastructure, expanding the export base and directing it to new markets, slowing down the defense budget growth, and removing bureaucratic obstacles. These are the main required steps. All of them, without exception, will minimize economic gaps within Israel.
We are already enjoying strong backwind. Here are four examples: The kibbutzim reinvented themselves and have again turned into an economic asset and a significant growth accelerator; the discovery of natural gas by businessman Yitzhak Tshuva frees Israel of the depdendancy on coal and dramatically brings down the cost of producing electricity; the Arab sector is seeing an unprecedented entrepreneurial business revolution; Israeli software companies are taking over Africa – and there are many more examples.
Diplomatic component
At this time, Israel is equipped with the needed means for a great leap. These means are integrated and also include a diplomatic/political component. In the past, Netanyahu claimed that Israel can grow and become wealthier even without a peace deal (but not under intifada conditions). Yet now he knows: A diplomatic agreement with the Palestinians is a vital condition for the great economic leap. First and foremost, because without such deal, the world will have trouble countering Iran and forcing it to abandon its nuclear program.
The grave economic implications that Iranian nuclear capabilities will have for Israel’s economy are horrifying. A nuclear arms race will add tens of billions of dollars to the defense budget, at the expense of developing the economy. One government body has already prepared a scenario for the day after Iran acquires a nuclear bomb: Foreign investors fleeing, Israeli investors taking their money and assets out of the homeland, and the grim and frightened national mood paralyzing production.
On the other hand, an Israel-Palestinian agreement would serve as a lever for orchestrated global activity – and possibly military action as a last resort – against the Iranian nuclear program. This will enable us to save tens of billions of dollars. Such deal will also open up the giant markets of rich Gulf states, which are desperate for the kinds of products and services Israel specializes in, ranging from right-to-left software systems to salt water purifiers for desert springs.
Incredible gift
Communism’s collapse in the late 1980s granted Israel an incredible gift in the form of the massive immigration from the former Soviet Union and the opening of export markets that were off limits for dozens of years. Israeli governments and the business sector managed to take advantage of the opportunity and completely change the face of our economy. Within about 12 years, we went up from a $10,000 per capita GDP to $20,000 per capita GDP.
Later we turned from a state that owes money to foreigners and contends with a foreign currency shortage to a country that foreigners owe money to, and that has foreign currency surpluses. Our economic, rather than military, independence is full by now.
The 2007-2008 crisis again grants Israel an incredible opportunity, this time in respect to competing against the developed world; the crisis undermined its pillars and posed deep trouble for it. Will we be foolish enough to miss out on this opportunity?
Tags: boom, crisis, economic, economy, israel, world
Posted in Finance, Israeli Economy, Life in Israel | 2 Comments »
Israeli Legislators Declare War on Exploding Popcorn Prices
Written by Marty Roberts on April 2, 2010 – 12:19 pm -Once again, the Jewish People are fulfilling our mandate, given by the Torah to Moses at Mount Sinai, to be a “Light unto the nations”. The Israeli parliament (knesset) will be leading the rally around the world to bring the price of popcorn in movie theaters to realistic levels. As a kid, I never COULD buy popcorn when I went to the movies…just too expensive. Now, maybe impoverished youth worldwide will be able to enjoy their favorite flic while happily crunching on exploded corn kernels. We can only hope and pray that the dire prophecies of doom being chanted by the movie theater companies. THEY claim that their entire business is supported by sales of the white manna at puffed-up prices.
Lead on, Israeli lawmakers…
Reprinted from The Guardian Ben Childs
It is the source of angst for cinemagoers worldwide – why is the price of popcorn so high? Now an Israeli politician is threatening to introduce legislation that would ban cinemas in the country from overcharging for snacks and soft drinks.Carmel Shama of the governing Likud party will attempt to introduce the measure when Israeli MPs return from their Passover break next week. He claims to have cross-party support for the move, which is fiercely opposed by cinema chains and other public entertainment venues where it would apply, such as sports stadiums and concert venues.
“We have to put an end to this. The public should not have to mortgage their houses for a soft drink and a snack,” Shama tells today’s Yediot Aharonot newspaper.
A large box of popcorn costs about $5 in Israeli cinemas, more than double what it would be in a supermarket and 10 times what it would cost to make at home. Yet Yaacov Cohen, owner of one of Israel’s largest chains, said cinema owners made virtually no profit from ticket sales and would struggle to survive if food sales were limited. “It would destroy the entire industry,” he told Yediot.
Two years ago, researchers from Stanford and the University of California in Santa Cruz found that members of the public were not being ripped off over the cost of popcorn and other confectionery – because profits were used to subsidise cinema tickets. While they accounted for only about 20% of gross revenues, food and drink sales represented some 40% of cinema profits, the researchers found. This was because 100% of proceeds went straight into an exhibitor’s coffers, while ticket revenues were shared with movie distributors.
Tags: cinema, israeli, knesset, legislator, popcorn, theater
Posted in Israeli Economy, Israeli Entertainment, Israeli Parliament (Knesset), Life in Israel | No Comments »
Great News for Israel’s Economy…Stanley Fischer…5 More Years
Written by Marty Roberts on March 19, 2010 – 2:11 pm -It’s official…Great news for the Israeli economy…Five more years of Stanley Fischer heading the Bank of Israel

Fischer to serve 2nd term as Bank of Israel governor
‘There is no disagreement in the whole world that he does an excellent work,’ prime minister says in press conference announcing his support of central bank head. ‘Now he just has to say yes’
Reprinted from YNet News Zvi Lavi
Stanley Fischer will likely serve as the Bank of Israel’s governor for another five years. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Wednesday in a press conference at the Knesset that he will recommend that Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz appoint Fischer for another term as governor.As expected, Fischer agreed to the offer after the new Bank of Israel law was passed Tuesday in the Knesset. Fischer is slated to receive the letter of appointment from President Shimon Peres soon.
Fischer’s current term as governor is slated to end on April 30. He will be instated to his second term on May 1.
“This is a man on whom there is no disagreement in the whole world that he does excellent work,” said the prime minister, noting that the Fischer’s recommendation for another term was mutually made between him and the finance minister. “Now all that’s left is for you to say yes,” Netanyahu addressed Fischer, who was sitting next to him on the stage.
“I thank you for the recommendation, and I will continue to fill my position in accordance with the challenges presented by the new Bank of Israel law,” responded Fischer.
“When Netanyahu offered me the position, I couldn’t have imagined what happened in the first run. But it was a challenging period, the height of which was the financial crisis, which we handled well and also came out of.”
Hints dropped recently by the governor to the effect that he would not agree to serve another five years without a new Bank of Israel law spurred the cabinet to submit the bill for the Knesset’s approval before leaving for Passover recess.
The new law, which replaces the 56-year-old Bank of Israel Act, cements the Bank’s independence and instates a regular monetary committee to decide on interest rates and makes provisions regarding Bank employees’ salaries, thus comparing them to other public sector employees.
There was some uncertainty in recent months whether Fischer would continue on for another term, and not just because of the Bank of Israel law. Fischer’s wife and family were pressuring him not to act another term, but the governor insisted that he would remain in the position of the Bank of Israel law were passed so that he could oversee putting the new structure of the bank into action, as detailed in the law.
In the past, Fischer implied that the decision to serve another term would be easier if it were shortened to a period of two years. However, doubts regarding the length of Fischer’s term were also dissipated when he accepted the appointment as he assured in his speech that he would serve the full five year term.
About two years ago, Fischer threatened to resign over the crisis between the Bank of Israel and the Finance Ministry around the signing of a new salary agreement. Prolonged and exhaustive negotiations ensued between the two bodies regarding whether the Finance Ministry would continue its oversight over Bank of Israel salaries. Then Prime Minister Ehud Olmert stepped in and convinced Fischer to withdraw his resignation threat.
‘Fischer among best in world’
Knesset Finance Committee Chairman MK Moshe Gafni praised Fischer’s decision to stay on for another term. Gafni said, “The governor is a professional of the first degree and a leader in the entire world.”
“Stanley Fischer is a real asset to the State of Israel. The Israeli economy owes him a lot for its stability throughout the global financial crisis over the past year. There is no doubt that his staying on for another term will contribute significantly to the Israeli economy and its standing in the world,” said Gafni.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak also welcomed Fischer’s acceptance of another term as bank governor.
“Stanley Fischer is considered one of the most outstanding and professional governors that the Israeli economy has known since the establishment of the state. Governor Fischer successfully handled the financial crisis in a manner that deserves respect. He was among those who helped the Israeli economy get through it strong and secure,” said Barak.
Tags: bank of Israel, economy, israel, stanley fischer
Posted in American Jews, Finance, Israeli Economy, Life in Israel | No Comments »
And the Israeli Economy Continues to Get Stronger and Stronger…
Written by Marty Roberts on March 15, 2010 – 12:45 pm -More good news that the Israeli economic recovery is right on track..getting stronger and stronger.
And, the best news of all, looks like immigrant-from-America Bank of Israel Head, Stanley Fischer, will be staying on for another term…One of the best things that can happen to the Israeli economy, promising an even stronger recovery…Good things for the future…

Fischer hopes for return to ‘normalcy’
“The Bank of Israel is trying to bring interest rates back to a ‘normal’ level, which would bring inflation back down into the target range, and to support the recovery of the economy and financial stability,” Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer told a central bank conference in Tel Aviv yesterday.
Reprinted from Haaretz.com Eytan Avriel
“All the while we will follow what’s going on in the world and take into consideration the shekel exchange rates,” Fischer told the conference, entitled “Challenges for the Future.”“The central bank of a small, open economy cannot be indifferent to the exchange rate,” he said. When things start going back to normal, the bank will probably intervene less in the foreign currency market.
“We can reduce in stages the frequency of our interventions in the foreign exchange market, but it’s dependent on other considerations such as the interest rate, as well as the international and Israeli economy,” he said.
Fischer also addressed the challenges facing him at the beginning of a second term as bank governor. The first challenge involves the internal management of the bank.
Fischer also mentioned that discussions on the new Bank of Israel Law had just finished in the Knesset Finance Committee; next week the bill is expected to pass its second and third readings in the full Knesset to become law. The bill has been one of Fischer’s conditions for accepting a second term. Soon the bank will face the challenge of implementing it – “building a modern Bank of Israel, which the Israeli economy needs for the 21st century,” Fischer said.
The second challenge is fiscal and monetary policy as the world recovers from the financial crisis, he said. “There are countries that are managing to recover better … and there are countries that are having more difficulties…. During the crisis, the European nations handled it better, but now they’re having trouble,” he said.
Tags: bank of Israel, economy, israeli, stanley fischer
Posted in American Jews, Finance, Israeli Economy, Jewish People, Life in Israel | No Comments »
Life in the Holyland Goes On..We’ll Shop Until We Drop
Written by Marty Roberts on March 11, 2010 – 5:59 pm -Here, in Israel, we can’t just enjoy the opening of a wonderful new shopping outlet. No, it has to be accompanied by international protests and threats of boycotts and UN investigations, perhaps the shoppers are committing war crimes with their dress purchases.
But, thank G-d, it doesn’t seem to phase us Israelis…We just go right about our business of shopping in the beautiful new store, enjoying the fruits of our flourishing Israeli economy. Let the world storm on around us…Life in the Holyland goes on…

Shoppers storm Israel’s 1st H&M store
Anti-Israel groups in Europe to protest chain’s decision to open in Israel
Reprinted from JPost.com
Hundreds of enthusiastic shoppers waited outside the first local H&M store on Thursday, as the Swedish-owned fashion house opened their first store in Israel in Tel Aviv’s Azrieli Center.
Immediately after the count down, dozens of customers ran into the store, practically trampling two baby strollers in their rush to enter, Channel 2 reported. Passersby managed to save the babies while shoppers continued to flow into the store.“This place looks like the site of a terror attack,” one shopper told the television station.
Meanwhile in Europe, anti-Israel organizations in Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, the UK, Austria, Canada and Ireland were planning to demonstrate on Thursday evening against H&M’s decision to open shops in Israel.
According to Army Radio, a young Jewish man named Jonathan Sanchek, organized the protests. “This protest is about H&M opening in Israel, while it continues the occupation and in settlement construction. The Goldstone Report was published recently, and we think that one cannot open a store in Israel until it starts obeying international law,” the radio station quoted him as saying.
A statement calling on Europeans to protest against the store’s opening in Israel was also published on the palsolidarity.org Web site. “The familiar red H&M sign will be visible in the Azrieli Mall in Tel Aviv and, a few days later, in the Malcha shopping center in Jerusalem, a city gradually cleansed of its Palestinian population to be replaced by Jewish-Israeli settlements,” the statement reads.
“H&M is thus investing in Israel at the same time as the UN Goldstone commission and international organizations that H&M is cooperating with, such as UNICEF and the UN, report about Israel’s crimes against international law and human rights,” it added.
Tags: H & M, holyland, israel, shopping
Posted in Europe, Israeli Culture, Israeli Economy, Life in Israel | No Comments »






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