Education
sector likely to be hardest hit as Binyamin Netanyahu seeks 2% cut to
government spending to offset cost of Gaza war
theguardian.com,
Peter Beaumont in Jerusalem, Sunday 31 August 2014
Israel has been presented with a hefty bill for 50 days of war in Gaza, as the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, moved to slash government spending by 2% this year to offset the $2.52 bn (£1.51bn) cost of the conflict.
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| Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu is looking to reduce government spending by 2% this year. Photograph: Jim Hollander/EPA |
Israel has been presented with a hefty bill for 50 days of war in Gaza, as the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, moved to slash government spending by 2% this year to offset the $2.52 bn (£1.51bn) cost of the conflict.
With only
the Israeli military and domestic intelligence agency Shin Bet exempt from the
sharp spending reductions, the area to be hit hardest emerged as the Israeli
education system, with critics – including members of Netanyahu's cabinet –
predicting that the poorest Israelis will feel the brunt of the cuts.
Among those
protesting was the welfare minister, Meir Cohen, who insisted there was no more
fat in his budget to trim.
"From
whom will we take? From those who have nothing to put in their children's
sandwiches for school?" he complained on Israeli army radio.
Amid
estimates by some economic observers that the war may have cost Israel a
decline of 0.5% in its growth in GDP, Netanyahu defended the stringent
across-the-board cuts before a cabinet meeting in the country's south on Sunday,
insisting: "Security comes first."
The
proposed emergency budget reductions, amounting to about $561m, will help fund
a sharp hike in the budget of Israel's armed forces and Shin Bet amid estimates
that the latest round of fighting in Gaza cost Israel $50m for each day of the
war.
The Israeli
budget for this year – even before the war and the latest proposed cuts – had
already heralded a bout of belt-tightening that had seen a fierce fight over
spending cuts, later reversed, to the Israeli defence forces.
On the
Palestinian side experts have estimated that the bill for reconstruction after
the conflict could be upwards of $6bn and take 20 years to accomplish under the
current Israeli and Egyptian restrictions on imports of building materials into
Gaza.
The Israeli
budget cuts come amid evidence that Israel's economy – which had already been
slowing to a sluggish 1.7% growth in the second quarter of this year, including
the key hi-tech sector – had been hard hit by the weeks of conflict, not least
tourism.
Netanyahu
has also been facing demands to increase the scope of an already large
compensation package for southern Israeli communities close to the Gaza Strip.
Speaking
ahead of the cabinet meeting on Sunday, Netanyahu insisted: "We are
starting to fill in what is lacking in the defence budget, As we saw recently,
defence comes before all else.
"We
will start to fill in what is missing in the defence establishment. This
reflects our understanding of the priorities, with security coming before all
else. We did great things, but this requires us to roll up our sleeves to
enable the IDF, the Israel security agency [Shin Bet], and the security
services to continue to defend Israel effectively."
The new
austerity programme – which had been anticipated – emerged amid continuing
criticism by Israelis of Netanyahu and his government, whose approval has
plummeted since a long-term cease fire with Hamas was agreed last week.
The scale
of the cuts have been dictated by the insistence of Netanyahu's finance minister,
Yair Lapid, that he will not raise taxes to cover any shortfall.
The
disclosure of the scope and potential impact of the proposed cuts came as
Israel announced on Sunday a land appropriation in the occupied West Bank that
an anti-settlement group termed the biggest in 30 years and a Palestinian
official said would cause only more friction after the Gaza war.
Four
hundred hectares (988 acres) in the Etzion settlement bloc near Bethlehem were
declared "state land, on the instructions of the political echelon"
by the military-run civil administration.


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