Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli Finance Ministry report: Economy unlikely to reach pre-pandemic growth until 2025

The report, based on predictions of a third coronavirus wave, states that some 800,000 people are currently unemployed and that 70,000 businesses will have folded by the end of the year.

Pedestrians in downtown Jerusalem on Aug. 2, 2020. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.
Pedestrians in downtown Jerusalem on Aug. 2, 2020. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.

Israel’s Finance Ministry assesses in a new report that it could take the economy until 2025 to return to its pre-pandemic unemployment rates and growth statistics.

According to the report, released on Sunday by Channel 13, the assessment is based on predictions of a third COVID-19 wave, requiring the reinstatement of harsh measures, such as lockdowns, to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

The report forecasts that the negative growth for 2020 alone will be somewhere between 5.9 and 7.2 percent, with some 70,000 businesses having folded by the end of 2020, as opposed to 45,000 in an average year, and the number of people currently out of work estimated to be 800,000.

Meanwhile, the Bank of Israel reported on Sunday that some 50,000 young couples in Israel are having difficulty making their mortgage repayments, which now amount to more than 30 percent of their monthly income.

Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu said: “After years in which sites were neglected or looted, Israel is making historical corrections.”
Using this phrase against Israel is no less absurd than labeling sport-hooliganism and violence at mass demonstrations in the West as officially sponsored, government-sanctioned violence.
“Nearly eight years after the shooting, our gratitude and admiration for the heroic bravery and selfless dedication of the first responders that day endures,” said U.S. Attorney Troy Rivetti.
Yitzhak Ben-Hebron escaped Arab riots as a child and later returned to rebuild the Jewish community in the city.
Army Maj. Gen. Jasper Jeffers III said that future conflicts will require allied special operations forces to integrate quickly and operate with compatible systems.
“The strength and resilience you and your families demonstrate throughout the recovery and rehabilitation process inspire the entire nation of Israel,” the IDF chief said.