Israel
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Economy - overviewIsrael has a technologically advanced market economy with substantial, though diminishing, government participation. It depends on imports of crude oil, grains, raw materials, and military equipment. Despite limited natural resources, Israel has intensively developed its agricultural and industrial sectors over the past 20 years. Israel imports substantial quantities of grain, but is largely self-sufficient in other agricultural products. Cut diamonds, high-technology equipment, and agricultural products (fruits and vegetables) are the leading exports. Israel usually posts sizable trade deficits, which are covered by large transfer payments from abroad and by foreign loans. Roughly half of the government's external debt is owed to the US, which is its major source of economic and military aid. The bitter Israeli-Palestinian conflict; difficulties in the high-technology, construction, and tourist sectors; and fiscal austerity in the face of growing inflation led to small declines in GDP in 2001 and 2002. The economy rebounded in 2003-05, growing at a 4% to 5.2% rate each year, as the government tightened fiscal policy and implemented structural reforms to boost competition and efficiency in the markets. The conflict with Lebanon in summer 2006 slightly dampened GDP growth, but continuing strong foreign investment, tax revenue, and private consumption levels helped the economy recover quickly.
GDP7.3% (2006)
GDP - real growth rate4.8% (2006 est.)
GDP - composition by sectoragriculture: 2.6%
industry: 30.8%
services: 66.6% (2006 est.)
Population below poverty line21.6% (2005)
Household income or consumption
by percentage share
lowest 10%: 2.4%
highest 10%: 28.31% (2005)
Distribution of family income
- Gini index
38.6 (2005)
Labor force2.6 million (2006 est.)
Labor force - by occupationagriculture, forestry, and fishing 1.8%, manufacturing 15.7%, construction 5.3%, wholesale and retail trade 12.9%, transport, storage, and communications 6.3%, finance and business 16.9%, personal and other services 11.5%, public services 28.6% (1996)
Unemployment rate8.3% (30 September 2006)
Budgetrevenues: $48.4 billion
expenditures: $49.57 billion; including capital expenditures of $NA (2006 est.)
Industrieshigh-technology projects (including aviation, communications, computer-aided design and manufactures, medical electronics, fiber optics), wood and paper products, potash and phosphates, food, beverages, and tobacco, caustic soda, cement, construction, metals products, chemical products, plastics, diamond cutting, textiles, footwear
Industrial production growth rate8.6% (2006 est.)
Electricity -
production
46.07 billion kWh (2004)
Electricity -
production by source
fossil fuel: 99.9%
hydro: 0.1%
nuclear: 0%
other: 0% (2001)
Electricity -
consumption
41.38 billion kWh (2004)
Electricity -
exports
1.47 billion kWh (2004)
Electricity -
imports
0 kWh (2004)
Oil - production100 bbl/day (2006 est.)
Oil - consumption249,500 bbl/day (2006 est.)
Oil - exportsNA bbl/day
Oil - importsNA bbl/day
Oil - proved reserves2 million bbl (1 January 2006)
Agriculture - productscitrus, vegetables, cotton; beef, poultry, dairy products
Exports$42.86 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.)
Exports - commoditiesmachinery and equipment, software, cut diamonds, agricultural products, chemicals, textiles and apparel
Exports - partnersUS 36.5%, Belgium 8.7%, Hong Kong 5.6% (2005)
Imports$47.8 billion f.o.b. (2006 est.)
Imports - commoditiesraw materials, military equipment, investment goods, rough diamonds, fuels, grain, consumer goods
Imports - partnersUS 13.4%, Belgium 10.1%, Germany 6.4%, UK 5.7%, Switzerland 5.5%, China 4.2% (2005)
Debt - external$81.98 billion (30 June 2006 est.)
Economic aid - recipient$240 million from US (FY06)
Currency codeILS
Exchange ratesnew Israeli shekels per US dollar - 4.4565 (2006), 4.4877 (2005), 4.482 (2004), 4.5541 (2003), 4.7378 (2002)
Fiscal yearcalendar year
LAST UPDATED ON 17 JUNE 2007