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Contents

General Section

General Information

Infrastructure

Introduction

Railways

Roads

Ports

Telecom

Energy

Power

Oil & Gas

Banking

Banking

Travel

Travel

Policies

Finance Policy

Trade

Trade

Exim

Tax Structure

Tax System

Important Contacts

Important Contacts

   
 

 

 
   

 

 

Policies (Finance Policies)

The government's total deficit fell in 1999 from 2.4 percent of GDP to 2.25 percent, continuing the decline from 4.1 percent in 1996 to 2.8 percent in 1997. Despite the fact that the decline in 1999 fits in well with the declared strategy of long-term reduction in the deficit, i.e., fiscal consolidation, the path of the deficit during the year and government decisions taken during the period reviewed regarding the deficit for the year 2000 and beyond create difficulties in continuing this strategy. When the government started discussing the budget in August 1999, it was estimated that at the end of the year the deficit would total 3 percent of GDP. Consequently, the government raised the target for 2000 from the 1.75 percent specified in the original law to 2.5 percent of GDP, a rate which reflected a decline from the then prevailing estimated deficit for 1999. Since then the planning environment has changed:

a) Income tax has increased as a result of economic recovery, enabling the deficit in 1999 to fall from 3 percent to 2.25 percent of GDP, so that the plan fixed in August 1999 now represents a rise in the deficit, in opposition to the long-term strategy described above, and
b) The probability that growth in 2000 will exceed 3 percent - the assumption on which the budget for 2000 was based - has risen. It is important to avoid a situation in which this growth finances additional government expenditure made possible without exceeding the budget deficit target for the year; such expenditure is liable to become permanent, and in the future will require a rise in the tax rate. The change in the planning environment is likely to weaken the strategy of fiscal consolidation. In those years the Budget Deficit Reduction Law was breached after the government passed a Supplementary Budget in 1994 based on high tax receipts, the result of the boom set off by the influx of immigrants. Dangers of this type are not unique to Israel's economy showed that in the 1970s, 1980s, and the first half of the 1990s, OECD countries would spend all the income received in periods of rapid growth, and this led to the significant and continued rise in the share of public expenditure in GDP. The rise incorporated all three main components of public expenditure - public consumption, transfer payments, and public-sector investment.

These results, combined with the new planning environment described above, paint a threatening picture for the strategy of reducing the share of government expenditure and deficit in GDP. The year 2000 will provide an important testing ground, as wage agreements for 1999 and beyond are signed. Wage agreements in the public sector signed in 1993 were, in retrospect, the main cause of deviations of the deficit. Another test is expected in 2001 and thereafter, years for which a deficit declining by at least 0.25 percent of GDP per year has been set; this is given as a function of growth, but without specifying the rate of growth required to achieve this reduction, and without a government undertaking not to raise taxation.

The success of fiscal consolidation depends on the extent to which it is based on reducing the share of public expenditure in GDP, and not on raising the tax burden. A reduction in the deficit of 0.25 percent of GDP, as required by the law, by means of lowering the share of public expenditure in GDP without raising tax rates is consistent with maintaining the long-term volume increase in public expenditure of about 3 percent, with GDP growth of 3.5 percent. If the rate of growth reaches 5 percent, and the rate of volume increase in public expenditure remains constant, this will be reflected in a cut of one percent of GDP in the share of public expenditure, with a more rapid return to the original path specified in the Budget Deficit Reduction Law. .

 

 

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