Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment

"Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis: An Assessment" was prepared as a follow-up to a report published in March 2002 ("Fifteen Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis" rep...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Policy Note
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank 2013
Subjects:
CPI
GDP
TAX
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/05/2430854/twenty-seven-months-intifada-closures-palestinian-economic-crisis-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14614
id okr-10986-14614
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ECONOMIC RECESSION
BANKRUPTCY
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
CONFLICT AREAS
DONOR FINANCE
BUDGET ADMINISTRATION
EMERGENCY RELIEF
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
TARGETED ASSISTANCE
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
REFUGEE RELIEF
LAND REHABILITATION
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
RECONSTRUCTION
PRIVATE INVESTMENTS
FISCAL ADMINISTRATION
TAX REVENUES
BORDER INTEGRATION
LABOR MARKET POLICY
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
DOMESTIC WORKERS
HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
INFORMATION DISSEMINATION
WAGE INCREASES
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
INCOME GENERATION
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
TRADE REGIME
TRADE EXPANSION
COMPETITIVENESS
GOODS
TRADE REGIME
TRADE BARRIERS
ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
WORK PERMITS
NATIONAL SECURITY
MILITARY OCCUPATION
MILITARY OPERATIONS
TRANSACTION COSTS ACCOUNTING
ADOLESCENTS
AGRICULTURE
BORROWING
CLIMATE
CLINICS
COMMITMENT
COMMITMENTS
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CPI
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DISBURSEMENT
DISBURSEMENTS
DONOR ASSISTANCE
DONOR COORDINATION
DONOR COUNTRIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
ECONOMIC STABILITY
ECONOMIC TRENDS
EXPENDITURES
EXPORTS
FAMILIES
FATIGUE
FINANCING GAP
FOREIGN ASSISTANCE
FREE TRADE
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT
GROWTH POTENTIAL
HUMAN RIGHTS
IMPORTS
INFLATION
INSURANCE
LEGISLATION
LIFTING
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
MALNUTRITION
MANUFACTURERS
MEDIA
MUNICIPAL FINANCE
MUNICIPALITIES
NATIONAL INCOME
OPPORTUNITY COST
PER CAPITA INCOMES
POPULATION GROWTH
POVERTY LINE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
REAL GDP
REFUGEES
REVENUE TRANSFERS
SAFETY
SAFETY NETS
SCHOOLS
SUPPLIERS
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TAX
TAX REVENUES
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TRANSACTION COSTS
TREASURY
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
VALUE ADDED
VIOLENCE
WAGES
WEALTH
WEALTH CREATION
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
spellingShingle ECONOMIC RECESSION
BANKRUPTCY
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
CONFLICT AREAS
DONOR FINANCE
BUDGET ADMINISTRATION
EMERGENCY RELIEF
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
TARGETED ASSISTANCE
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
REFUGEE RELIEF
LAND REHABILITATION
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
RECONSTRUCTION
PRIVATE INVESTMENTS
FISCAL ADMINISTRATION
TAX REVENUES
BORDER INTEGRATION
LABOR MARKET POLICY
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
DOMESTIC WORKERS
HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
INFORMATION DISSEMINATION
WAGE INCREASES
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
INCOME GENERATION
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
TRADE REGIME
TRADE EXPANSION
COMPETITIVENESS
GOODS
TRADE REGIME
TRADE BARRIERS
ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
WORK PERMITS
NATIONAL SECURITY
MILITARY OCCUPATION
MILITARY OPERATIONS
TRANSACTION COSTS ACCOUNTING
ADOLESCENTS
AGRICULTURE
BORROWING
CLIMATE
CLINICS
COMMITMENT
COMMITMENTS
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CPI
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DISBURSEMENT
DISBURSEMENTS
DONOR ASSISTANCE
DONOR COORDINATION
DONOR COUNTRIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
ECONOMIC STABILITY
ECONOMIC TRENDS
EXPENDITURES
EXPORTS
FAMILIES
FATIGUE
FINANCING GAP
FOREIGN ASSISTANCE
FREE TRADE
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT
GROWTH POTENTIAL
HUMAN RIGHTS
IMPORTS
INFLATION
INSURANCE
LEGISLATION
LIFTING
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
MALNUTRITION
MANUFACTURERS
MEDIA
MUNICIPAL FINANCE
MUNICIPALITIES
NATIONAL INCOME
OPPORTUNITY COST
PER CAPITA INCOMES
POPULATION GROWTH
POVERTY LINE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
REAL GDP
REFUGEES
REVENUE TRANSFERS
SAFETY
SAFETY NETS
SCHOOLS
SUPPLIERS
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TAX
TAX REVENUES
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TRANSACTION COSTS
TREASURY
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
VALUE ADDED
VIOLENCE
WAGES
WEALTH
WEALTH CREATION
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
World Bank
Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
West Bank and Gaza
description "Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis: An Assessment" was prepared as a follow-up to a report published in March 2002 ("Fifteen Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis" report no. 24931). The main objectives of this second Assessment are once again to help donors and the Palestinian Authority (PA) cope with the deep economic crisis in the West Bank and Gaza, as well as to encourage and inform discussion on Palestinian economic issues among the donors, the PA and the Government of Israel. Despite an inevitable preoccupation with short-term emergency issues, the report seeks to preserve a focus on the types of medium-term economic and institutional policies that will return to prominence once the current conflict ceases to dominate the daily lives of Palestinians and Israelis. While any short-term recovery will depend on the lifting of closures, this will not suffice to put the Palestinian economy onto a sustainable growth path. The de facto customs union with Israel formalized under the Paris Protocol makes the Palestinian economy particularly vulnerable to closure. In a structural sense, though, the long-term growth potential of the Palestinian economy has been stunted by the upward pressure on domestic Palestinian labor prices created by the wages paid to Palestinian workers in Israel. Domestic wage increases have exceeded any underlying growth in productivity, and have undermined Palestinians' ability to export competitively-priced goods to the rest of the world. Bank analysis shows that a proactive policy of export development, in which a more open and less discriminatory trade regime is adopted, should result in higher incomes by 2010 than a return to previous levels of employment in Israel. Between 1968 and 2000, Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza pursued a development strategy which featured the export of labor rather than goods. In June 2000, three months before the current Palestinian intifada began, 21 percent of all employed Palestinians worked in Israel, mainly in low-skilled construction and agricultural jobs. Net incomes from abroad provided more than 21 percent of Palestinian GNI, making it one of the most remittance-dependent economies in the world. This is why the loss of jobs in Israel in the past two years has had such a strong impact. Put another way, the intifada has demonstrated the vulnerability of a development strategy which relied so heavily on labor exports to Israel. The shift to a goods-based export policy would take time, would be subject to many uncertainties and would require the active cooperation of Israel to succeed; it is thus part and parcel of a political rapprochement. It is also true that restoring access to the Israeli labor market would be the quickest way to boost incomes for a large number of ordinary Palestinians. Realistically, though, a return to pre-September 2000 employment levels for Palestinians in Israel seems unlikely - and would anyway risk perpetuating a high level of Palestinian economic dependence on Israel, hindering the emergence of a diversified development strategy with much greater long-term growth potential.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment
title_short Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment
title_full Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment
title_fullStr Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment
title_sort twenty-seven months - intifada, closures, and palestinian economic crisis : an assessment
publisher World Bank
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/05/2430854/twenty-seven-months-intifada-closures-palestinian-economic-crisis-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14614
_version_ 1764428053329477632
spelling okr-10986-146142021-04-23T14:03:16Z Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures, and Palestinian Economic Crisis : An Assessment World Bank ECONOMIC RECESSION BANKRUPTCY UNEMPLOYMENT RATES CONFLICT AREAS DONOR FINANCE BUDGET ADMINISTRATION EMERGENCY RELIEF ECONOMIC RECOVERY TARGETED ASSISTANCE UNEMPLOYMENT RATES REFUGEE RELIEF LAND REHABILITATION PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT RECONSTRUCTION PRIVATE INVESTMENTS FISCAL ADMINISTRATION TAX REVENUES BORDER INTEGRATION LABOR MARKET POLICY CIVIL SERVICE REFORM POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY DOMESTIC WORKERS HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE INFORMATION DISSEMINATION WAGE INCREASES LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION INCOME GENERATION EXPORT PERFORMANCE TRADE REGIME TRADE EXPANSION COMPETITIVENESS GOODS TRADE REGIME TRADE BARRIERS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION WORK PERMITS NATIONAL SECURITY MILITARY OCCUPATION MILITARY OPERATIONS TRANSACTION COSTS ACCOUNTING ADOLESCENTS AGRICULTURE BORROWING CLIMATE CLINICS COMMITMENT COMMITMENTS CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CPI DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DISBURSEMENT DISBURSEMENTS DONOR ASSISTANCE DONOR COORDINATION DONOR COUNTRIES ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC IMPACT ECONOMIC OUTLOOK ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC SHOCKS ECONOMIC STABILITY ECONOMIC TRENDS EXPENDITURES EXPORTS FAMILIES FATIGUE FINANCING GAP FOREIGN ASSISTANCE FREE TRADE GDP GDP PER CAPITA GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT GROWTH POTENTIAL HUMAN RIGHTS IMPORTS INFLATION INSURANCE LEGISLATION LIFTING LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MALNUTRITION MANUFACTURERS MEDIA MUNICIPAL FINANCE MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL INCOME OPPORTUNITY COST PER CAPITA INCOMES POPULATION GROWTH POVERTY LINE PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC INVESTMENT REAL GDP REFUGEES REVENUE TRANSFERS SAFETY SAFETY NETS SCHOOLS SUPPLIERS SUSTAINABLE GROWTH TAX TAX REVENUES TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSACTION COSTS TREASURY UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE VALUE ADDED VIOLENCE WAGES WEALTH WEALTH CREATION WORKERS WORKPLACE "Twenty-Seven Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis: An Assessment" was prepared as a follow-up to a report published in March 2002 ("Fifteen Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis" report no. 24931). The main objectives of this second Assessment are once again to help donors and the Palestinian Authority (PA) cope with the deep economic crisis in the West Bank and Gaza, as well as to encourage and inform discussion on Palestinian economic issues among the donors, the PA and the Government of Israel. Despite an inevitable preoccupation with short-term emergency issues, the report seeks to preserve a focus on the types of medium-term economic and institutional policies that will return to prominence once the current conflict ceases to dominate the daily lives of Palestinians and Israelis. While any short-term recovery will depend on the lifting of closures, this will not suffice to put the Palestinian economy onto a sustainable growth path. The de facto customs union with Israel formalized under the Paris Protocol makes the Palestinian economy particularly vulnerable to closure. In a structural sense, though, the long-term growth potential of the Palestinian economy has been stunted by the upward pressure on domestic Palestinian labor prices created by the wages paid to Palestinian workers in Israel. Domestic wage increases have exceeded any underlying growth in productivity, and have undermined Palestinians' ability to export competitively-priced goods to the rest of the world. Bank analysis shows that a proactive policy of export development, in which a more open and less discriminatory trade regime is adopted, should result in higher incomes by 2010 than a return to previous levels of employment in Israel. Between 1968 and 2000, Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza pursued a development strategy which featured the export of labor rather than goods. In June 2000, three months before the current Palestinian intifada began, 21 percent of all employed Palestinians worked in Israel, mainly in low-skilled construction and agricultural jobs. Net incomes from abroad provided more than 21 percent of Palestinian GNI, making it one of the most remittance-dependent economies in the world. This is why the loss of jobs in Israel in the past two years has had such a strong impact. Put another way, the intifada has demonstrated the vulnerability of a development strategy which relied so heavily on labor exports to Israel. The shift to a goods-based export policy would take time, would be subject to many uncertainties and would require the active cooperation of Israel to succeed; it is thus part and parcel of a political rapprochement. It is also true that restoring access to the Israeli labor market would be the quickest way to boost incomes for a large number of ordinary Palestinians. Realistically, though, a return to pre-September 2000 employment levels for Palestinians in Israel seems unlikely - and would anyway risk perpetuating a high level of Palestinian economic dependence on Israel, hindering the emergence of a diversified development strategy with much greater long-term growth potential. 2013-07-26T16:22:48Z 2013-07-26T16:22:48Z 2003-05 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/05/2430854/twenty-seven-months-intifada-closures-palestinian-economic-crisis-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14614 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Economic & Sector Work Middle East and North Africa West Bank and Gaza