By
Steve Smith, IOL Washington correspondent
WASHINGTON,
March 28 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Israel's closure of
Palestinian territories and its crackdown on the Palestinian Intifida
against Israeli occupation have left the Palestinian economy near
total collapse, says a World Bank report.
"Mainly
as a result of the heavy restrictions on the movement of labor and
goods in the West Bank and Gaza [the 'closures'], the Palestinian
economy is in severe recession," said the Bank's ‘Fifteen
Months - Intifada, Closures and Palestinian Economic Crisis’.
According
to the report, released earlier this week, unemployment has tripled,
to almost one-third of the workforce. Real incomes have fallen by
almost 30 percent, and are now lower than they were in the late 1980s.
The proportion of the poor (those consuming less than two dollars per
day) has doubled, to almost a half of the population of the West Bank
and Gaza. The share of the Palestinian population living below the
poverty line is estimated at almost 50 percent, double what it was in
late 2000.
The
report, other parts of which will be later released this month, says
that the physical damage from the Intifada by the end of December 2001
is estimated at 305 million dollars, while Gross National Income
losses amounted to at least a whopping 2.4 billion dollars.
"The
economic crisis is not irreversible," the report quoted Nigel
Roberts, Director of the World Bank in the West Bank and Gaza, as
saying. "If the closures are lifted, the Palestinian economy will
recover."
"If
closures persist or intensify, the economy will eventually unravel,”
added Roberts. “Public services will break down. Unemployment and
poverty rates will continue to climb. Helplessness, deprivation and
hatred will increase, and this unique chance for reconciliation will
pass."
The
report, which was prepared by the Bank with the technical support from
Office Of The United Nations Special Co-Ordinator (UNSCO) and finance
from the Government of Norway, squarely blames Israeli closures of
Palestinians territories for the disintegration of the Palestinian
economy.
"It
is clear that the main proximate cause of the Palestinian economic
crisis is closure, the impact of which far exceeds that of armed
confrontation and associated physical destruction," says the
report.
In
its first section, the report described how Israel's policy of
closures (internal closure within the West Bank and Gaza, closure of
the borders between Israel and those areas, and closure of
international crossings between them and neighboring main trading
partners Jordan and Egypt) has left trade and movement of goods at a
complete stop.
The
Bank says that the Palestinian Authority (PA) finances have seen a
rapid depletion since the start of the Israeli closure policy in
September 2000 because of "a sharp drop in PA revenue
collections" associated with the drop in economic activity and
interruption of tax administration.
The
exhaustion of the PA coffers is also attributed to the suspension,
since December 2000 by the Israeli occupation government, of the
transfer of the revenues, like taxes and tariffs, collected on the
PA's behalf (over 500 million dollars at that time). The bankruptcy is
compounded by an increase in the need for crisis expenditures, mainly
in health.
"It
is axiomatic from the Bank's analysis that any significant recovery of
the Palestinian economy requires that the Government of Israel
dismantle the present system of internal checkpoints and border
restrictions on goods and workers," said the report. "In
addition, withheld tax revenues need to be released to the PA
(Palestinian Authority), and regular revenue clearances resumed."
The
report, however, notes that Palestinian survival so far has been
achieved by a solid PA emergency plans, strong social fabric and help
from international donors.
The
PA has managed the crisis well, says the report, particularly the
budget, delivery of basic services and physical rehabilitation
efforts. The PA has managed this deficit by borrowing from commercial
banks, slashing salaries, constricting operating costs and shelving
the payment of bills.
"But
all of these strategies are reaching their limit," warned the
report. Households have reduced their expenditures and drawn down
their savings, and informal self-help and sharing systems have
"redistributed" the economic pain.
The
donors who now often work through Non Governmental Organizations have
injected "timely and generous emergency assistance." Despite
the difficulties of working in conflict, donor disbursements
registered a 93 percent hike in 2001 when compared with 1999 (to
almost 930 million dollars). Over 80 percent of this was devoted to
budget support and emergency relief. "This unprecedented quantity
of budget support has helped sustain a minimum level of market demand
and has prevented the disintegration of government structures,"
noted the report.
Donor
contributions to United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East, better known as the UNRWA, have also been
key, and numerous small-scale job creation programs for the newly
unemployed have been put in place.
"Without
the intervention of the donors, and in particular the Arab League and
European Union states, all semblance of a modern economy would have
disappeared by now," said the report.
The
report suggested that there was still a need for a well-designed
Palestinian reform agenda that ensures "public accountability and
transparency", and offers a firm legal milieu for private
investment.
The
report, however, warned that the economy is not far from total
collapse with many households nearly exhausting all their savings and
capacity to borrow. Emergency employment schemes have not made a
noteworthy dent on unemployment. The fiscal situation continues to
worsen, and donor assistance has not closed the budget deficit, the
report says.
Nearly
1,300 people died because of the Israel military crackdown since
September 28, 2000 and nearly 20,000 were injured, says the report. Of
the dead, more than 900 were Palestinian and 220 Israeli; of the
injured, some 17,000 were Palestinian (some 2,500 of whom are expected
to suffer permanent disability).