The February 10 general election was extremely inconclusive. The 2 leading parties, Kadima and Likud, won a practically equal number of seats in the new Knesset, with each one's share less than 25% of the total 120 Knesset seats. There is no certainty as to which of the leaders of these parties w
First things first: the 2009 State Budget. Knesset approval of this budget (generally by 31 December of the previous year) was postponed unt
Based on what we know at present, the party leader asked to form a government w
Is there a problem with this? If the approval of any budget proposal is delayed, the government is allowed to spend each month during the delay period 1/12 of the total budget expenditure of the previous year, so there is a de facto budget. But the new budget is supposed to reflect the government's economic policy for the current year, so a delay in approving the new budget means a delay in implementing necessary economic policy. This creates uncertainty, particularly unwanted when the underlying economic situation is bad and in itself a source of great uncertainty, as it certainly is at present.
This brings us to the declared economic policy of each of the two party leaders vying to head the new government, both recognizing the fact that the Israeli economy is clearly on its way to recession or is already in recession. One major proof of this is a steep decline in tax revenues that began in early 2008 and is forecast to continue in 2009. About one thing there is complete consensus regarding the 2009 budget – the budget deficit is going to be much higher this year, as a direct result of the decline in tax revenues: it was already higher in 2008 (2.1% of GDP) than in 2007, when the budget was balanced.
Back to declared economic policy: in its election campaign, the Likud announced that if it came to power, it intended to reduce tax rates to help the economy exit the recession. This planned policy is strongly opposed by both the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Israel – if the 2009 budget deficit is already going to be much higher at existing tax rates, they argue, lowering tax rates w
Given the severity of its current economic situation and the deep uncertainty it has created,