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    Economic gaps widening in affluent Israel

    JERUSALEM (AP) — First came a revolt over cheese that forced Israel's largest dairy companies to lower their prices.

    Now, with consumer rage mounting over what is widely seen as a staggering cost of living, tent camps have sprung up across Israel to protest housing prices that climbed while costs fell globally amid the world's financial meltdown.

    The camps draw inspiration from the mass demonstrations in the Arab world, and illustrate Israel's paradox: While its economy is roaring, many Israelis aren't enjoying the good times.

    The country has one of the highest poverty rates and income gaps in the developed world. Food prices have surged in recent months, as have fuel costs, while recent strikes by social workers and doctors spotlight how the frustration has cut across all layers of the society.

    But with prices for modest apartments well over $500,000, it's the housing crunch that has Israelis like Lital Yitzhak and her husband, a warehouse manager, fuming.

    Eight months ago, the couple was forced to move in with her mother because the $900 per month they were paying to rent a small, two-bedroom apartment in one of Jerusalem's poorest neighborhoods left them heavily in debt.

    "I don't know what a young couple is supposed to do," said Yitzhak, a substitute preschool teacher who, together with her spouse, earns about $1,800 a month — at the low end of what Israel's working class pulls in.

    However, the crunch many like them endure is not reflected through the country's main economic indicators.

    A month ago, Israel's central bank raised its official 2011 growth forecast to 5.2 percent, more than twice the International Monetary Fund's estimate released in June for real GDP growth for advanced economies. Unemployment in Israel has fallen to 5.8 percent, its lowest level in decades.

    The current government "has had significant economic achievements," Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz boasted in a television interview on Tuesday.

    On the surface, the gains are impressive.

    Expensive apartment complexes are being built, new cars ply the streets, and pricey restaurants are packed.

    But many Israelis complain that the overt signs of economic growth are misleading — reflecting the benefits enjoyed by a wealthy minority while the majority struggles.

    Due to heavy taxes, gasoline, for instance, costs $8 a gallon, and a family sedan carries a price tag of $35,000 or more. A standard, 1,000-square-foot (100 square meter) apartment can easily top $600,000 in metropolitan centers like Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and $200,000 to $300,000 in second-tier areas.

    Meanwhile, the average Israeli salary stands at about $2,500 per month, with key professions like teachers, civil servants and social workers typically earning less than $2,000 a month.

    Many jobs are available only for part-time employees or offer low wages with few benefits, experts say, while the government's critics point to an underdeveloped public transportation system as curtailing access to better paying jobs.

    "The trouble is, too little trickles down and too much stays in the hands of a very small proportion of the population, which certainly has become much richer in recent years," said John Gal, dean of the school of social work and social welfare at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

    The housing crunch has mushroomed largely on the back of supply not keeping pace with demand. Between December 2007 and August 2010, housing prices jumped an inflation-adjusted 35 percent.

    The spike in prices sparked a grass roots outcry, with the epicenter of the protest in Tel Aviv, where dozens of tents occupied mostly by young people now line the median of a wealthy boulevard. In Jerusalem, a couple of dozen tents were pitched on a patch of grass facing the walls of the Old City.

    "Prices have skyrocketed all over the country," said Merav Cohen, an affordable housing activist and Jerusalem City councilwoman. "The situation is dire."

    The images of the tent camps, appearing on the evening news and front pages of newspapers, have caught Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's attention — in part because they come at a time when iconic images of tents in central Cairo speak to the political upheaval taking place in neighboring Egypt. Much of that unrest, too, stems from years of economic inequity and a widening gap between rich and poor.

    Netanyahu has promised to solve the housing problem by freeing up government-owned land for construction, cutting red tape so apartments could be built quickly and offering tax breaks to entice real estate investors to put empty apartments on the market.

    Critics, however, question whether more apartments will translate into lower prices.

    The skepticism is linked to Israeli's relatively unique dynamics.

    Steep defense and welfare spending have led to high taxes. Another major factor is the concentration of the economy in the hands of just a few businesses, encouraging the type of cartels that prompted a revolt against cottage cheese prices weeks earlier. That protest ended when Israeli dairy companies acquiesced before a massive Facebook campaign and cut prices 25 percent.

    Proposals to spur competition in key areas like electricity production have been on the table for years. These efforts, though, have either stalled or often transferred government monopolies to private hands. On the flip side, Israeli trade groups warn that opening the market to greater outside competition could result in job losses and factory closures.

    For the average working class Israeli, however, what matters is how costs hit their wallets.

    Merav Palachi, 49, has held a full-time civil service job for just over three decades and her husband has been with the postal service for nearly two. Between the two of them, they clear about $3,200 a month. Their salaries stretch thin with four children, a mortgage, two car loans and high food prices. Fruit is just too expensive for their budget, she says.

    "I don't dare to look at it" at the supermarket, she says. She buys discounted dry goods at a neighborhood food co-op. Her two older children, who are in their twenties, live at home because they can't afford to rent.

    "If they didn't live with me, they couldn't make it," she said.

     

    76 comments

    • Solar Child  •  9 mths ago
      Is it any wonder that the same set of circumstances are occurring here in America?
    • jake  •  10 mths ago
      WOW WATCH AP CHANGE THE TITLES UNTIL THEY CAN GET A REALLY HATEFUL ONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
      • Glen 10 mths ago
        I love to fill my heart with hate.
    • Harley  •  10 mths ago
      And this is the enevitable result in a society that taxes income and not wealth. Listen up USA, keep taxing the working class and this is our destiny, taxes on wealth and consumption not income.. wash rinse repeat.
    • Get Real  •  10 mths ago
      Sounds like the USA...except with universal healthcare and receiving billions of dollars in handouts instead of giving them
      • Jeph 10 mths ago
        Your tax dollars are paying for it.
      • George 10 mths ago
        I would vote for Isolationism once again, to hell with the middle east, and wast of our tax dollars.
    • Michael  •  10 mths ago
      $8.00 for gas isn't so bad where are they going to drive??? Syria
      • Glen 10 mths ago
        OMG! They are surrounded!
    • J  •  10 mths ago
      I guess they will have to work on Saturdays too to pay thier bills!!!!!!
    • Blah  •  10 mths ago
      whats the big deal??israel having economic troubles like every other country in this world..whats the story??should we feel compassionate for them and give them even more billions than we already do?
    • J  •  10 mths ago
      3 Billion a year so they can build 500k apartments. How does the 27 richest nation in the world have sooooooooo much inequality?
      • Harley 10 mths ago
        simple, they tax the wages of the working yet don't touch the wealth of the bugiouse
    • DonC  •  10 mths ago
      We care about Israel why?
      • no name 10 mths ago
        because they help us gather intelligence on arabs who are buying bombs with our money we pay them for oil. Because Israelis are not calling US "great Satan", like arabic countries, who live off our money we pay them for oil. Israelis actually like US and support our efforts and democracy. Because Israelis our only true allies in that region. Because with their hands US can do things that otherwise our politicians would not have guts to do. And for many other reasons unknown to beer-drinking-speculating-on-the-couch individuals like you.
      • Hans Delbruck 10 mths ago
        I wouldn't care if it vanished off the planet.
      • Glen 10 mths ago
        Did you know that our founding fathers did not want our country to be a democracy. They wanted a republic. Do you know the difference? You should.
    • Its 1984. U r the Resista ...  •  10 mths ago
      Yup. When you build a wall based upon racial lines and tell all of the lesser race on one side of the wall that they don't deserve #$%$ and you use a military blockade to keep help away and you regularly move around the lesser race's neighborhood with tanks and bombs, often killing women and children who are hiding or fleeing and peeing themselves in in mortal terror as you crash into their lives, it tends to increase the economic divide. It's completely understandable.
    • Big Time  •  10 mths ago
      Man that $6 billion a year we send them isn't enough. We better squeeze the American tax payer for more.
    • Realist  •  10 mths ago
      Except for the high gasoline taxes, this story is a glimpse of what is coming to America, if the Republicans and their super-capitalist friends are allowed to manipulate the economy in favor of greedy wealth owners at the expense of the largely gone middle class.
    • vern  •  10 mths ago
      don't worry JEWS, America will give you more and more and more until we are broke
    • Michael  •  10 mths ago
      You can always tell when a Jew has your best interest at heart! When they are walking away from you.
    • J  •  10 mths ago
      Where is the AIPAC money to help them?
    • jake  •  10 mths ago
      WOW THE ANTI SEMITES BIT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BAIT!
      TYPE AWAY !
      SHOW YOUR HATE!
      AND IGNORANCE!
    • Michael  •  10 mths ago
      If all the Jews were wealthy who would Jew who?
    • The Cool Spot  •  10 mths ago
      Israel is an illegal, apartheid state.
    • rensedotkom  •  10 mths ago
      Cry me a freakin river
      tell the patriarch zionist keike Rothschilde clan and their 500 trillion in private gold reserves to throw you a few schekels
      pleeeaaase
      poor tired beaten up jew!
      LOL right!
    • Black Jackk  •  10 mths ago
      The country has one of the highest poverty rates and income gaps in the developed world.

      This is after getting 60 billion dollar annual aid from US. Shame on you! This is what you get for illegal occupation
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