Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli Cabinet moves ahead with $1.9 billion COVID-19 stimulus plan

“We will continue to move the wheels of the economy in order to put people back to work,” says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israelis walk on Jaffa Road in Jerusalem's center on July 12, 2020. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90.
Israelis walk on Jaffa Road in Jerusalem’s center on July 12, 2020. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90.

Israel’s Cabinet on Sunday approved a NIS 6.5 billion ($1.9 billion) plan to grant nearly every Israeli citizen a one-time cash payment to help stimulate the country’s struggling economy, which has been hit hard by the coronavirus crisis.

The memorandum of the law approved by the Cabinet and which will be submitted to the Knesset for approval stipulates that every Israeli will receive NIS 750 ($220), and an additional NIS 500 ($147) for each child up to the third, according to a statement from the Prime Minister’s Office. The money will be transferred to the parent to whom the regular child allowance is paid.

The grant will be transferred automatically to all citizens whose details are registered with the National Insurance Institute, and the NII will contact citizens whose bank account details it does not have to provide for transfer of the grant, according to the statement.

Israelis already receiving one or more of the various support payments detailed in the draft law, including for convalescent care, disability, income assurance and alimony, among others, will receive an additional NIS 750.

Those with an annual income in excess of NIS 651,000 ($191,000) will not be eligible to receive either a grant or a grant supplement.

In his opening remarks to the Cabinet session, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that if following approval by the Cabinet, the measure would be passed on to the Knesset for “lighting legislation” with the aim of getting the money to Israeli citizens “as quickly as possible.”

“We are also working on additional plans to encourage the economy and channel funds to those who have been hurt by the coronavirus. We will continue to move the wheels of the economy in order to put people back to work,” he said.

Liz Berney, of ZOA, told JNS that the organization is “pleased that the Supreme Court and the appellate court properly dismissed this baseless case outright.”
“The meeting went very well,” the president wrote. “The United States is going to work with Lebanon in order to help it protect itself from Hezbollah.”
“Missouri stands with Israel and its people and we want to make sure that the world understands that,” the governor said while signing the bill.
“Academic freedom does not include platforming terrorists,” the LawFare Project stated, calling the event “institutional normalization of terrorism.”
Kimberly Richey, assistant secretary for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Education, stated that “no child should be taught by his or her teachers to hate their peers.”
After online radicalization, the man made two attempts to fly to Somalia to support ISIS, according to prosecutors.