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December 26, 2010 | Hagit Ofran
According to Peace Now's calculations, the various state budget items includeat least 2 billion shekelsdedicated to the settlements and the maintenance of the occupied territories. However, the budget invested in the settlements is much larger but well hidden between the various budget items.
How much do the settlements cost us?
If you are looking for a bottom line with a number at the end, we are sorry to disappoint you, but it is very hard to estimate the price of the occupation and the settlements. The difficulty is not only because Israel pays very high prices for maintaining the settlements and the continued occupation in terms of its security, values, society and international standing but also because the items in the state budget simply do not specify allocations to the settlements explicitly. Most of the budget items are worded in a general way without a geographical breakdown and without listing the communities for which the money is designated. Nevertheless, past attempts to estimate the price of the settlements reached 2.5 billion shekels a year.
How, then, do the settlements receive the surplus allocations?It is done in the budget allocation stage apparently in the decisions of the various ministries to divide the budget pie between the different communities, and their choice to prefer investments and projects in settlements at the expense of other locations. In order to know about special benefits for the settlements, the decisions of the various government ministries must be followed on a daily basis, and complete transparency about the budget allocations is needed.
Retroactive information - Some of the figures can be found in the publications of the Finance Ministry and the Central Bureau of Statistics on state transfers to local councils. The information is published after the end of the budget year and collected retroactively based on the actual budget performance. The transfers to the local councils are just part of the overall investment in the settlements. According to Finance Ministry figures, in 2007 the state transfers to local councils in the territories amounted to NIS 1,127,455,469(more than 1 billion and 100 million). That amounts to 8.9% of the total transfers from the state to councils that year. At that time the number of residents in the settlements was3.8% of the residents of Israel. Therefore the budget for the settlements was more than double their relative size in the population.
According to CBS figures, gross investment in public construction in Judea and Samaria (not including East Jerusalem) in 2009 was NIS 431 million, which constituted 15.36% of total public investments in construction for housing that year. It should be noted that some of that amount is included in the amount transferred by the state to the local councils.
A. Amounts that appear explicitly in the budget proposal (NIS):
|
Ministry |
Item |
2011 Budget |
2012 Budget |
Item Number in the budget |
|
Defense |
Coordination of activities in the territories |
238,435,000 |
233,499,000 |
17 |
|
Defense |
Seam zone -- continued construction and maintenance of separation fence |
790,000,000 |
842,000,000 |
1400 |
|
Education |
Higher education Council in Judea and Samaria |
454,000 |
450,000 |
203120 |
|
Prime Minister's Office |
Funding the disengagement plan* |
240,900,000 |
241,100,000 |
406 |
|
Prime Minister's Office |
Supplement to develop Old City basin in Jerusalem |
25,000,000 |
40112 |
|
|
Prime Minister's Office |
Supplement for Western Wall Heritage Foundation |
7,500,000 |
40112 |
|
|
Housing |
Security for settlers in Palestinian neighborhoods of East Jerusalem |
76,000,000 |
70,000,000 |
706910 |
|
Housing |
Development in Maale Adumim -- in 2011, 200 housing units going to market |
58,000,000 |
31,000,000 |
707005 |
|
Housing |
Development in Har Homa -- in 2011, 500 housing units going to market |
114,000,000 |
124,000,000 |
707007 |
|
Transportation |
Bus armoring |
10,000,000 |
10,000,000 |
|
|
Transportation |
Highway #20 between Pisgat Ze'ev and Highway 45 |
180,000,000 |
7930 |
|
|
Transportation |
Upgrading Hwy., #1 between Mishor Adumim and the Good Samaritan junction and between Pisgat Ze'ev and the Zeitim intersection |
255,000,000 |
||
|
Various subsidies |
Exporter compensation -- compensation for settlement factories for loss of tax discounts in European market |
11,165,000 |
10,830,000 |
320408 |
|
Total |
2,006,454,000 |
1,562,429,000 |
* Budgeting for disengagement is not a direct investment in the settlements but a continued investment in evacuating the settlements from the Gaza Strip
B. Selected items where budgets for the settlements are hidden:
|
Ministry |
Item |
2011 Budget |
2012 Budget |
Item number in the budget |
|
Transportation |
Support of other populations -- subsidy of bus prices for settlers and Haredim |
31,000,000 |
31,000,000 |
|
|
Defense |
Civilian emergency expenses -- fortification and security measures for settlements and confrontation line communities |
318,525,000 |
316,506,000 |
16 |
|
Housing |
Aid for national priority areas |
160,672,000 |
161,522,000 |
700916 |
|
Tourism |
Development of tourism infrastructures including projects in the territories |
55,000,000 |
52,600,000 |
|
|
Agriculture |
The settlement division -- aid for settlements and communities in the Negev and Galilee |
79,755,000 |
77,699,000 |
3328 |
|
Infrastructures |
Sewage projects including subsidies for the Judea and Samaria Council |
680,000,000 |
759,500,000 |
7322 |
|
Education |
Allocations for the Judea and Samaria Academic College -- the largest allocation of all colleges; in 2009 the amount was NIS 87.191 million |
|||
|
Industry |
Benefits to encourage capital investment |
517,285,000 |
316,857,000 |
3803 |
C. List of explicit budget items:
Housing Ministry:
Ministry of Education:
Transportation Ministry:
Defense Ministry:
Agriculture Ministry:
Various subsidies:
The Prime Minister's office
D. The hidden budgets in the budget proposal:
Most of the settlement budget is hiddenin the various budget items without explicit specification. The state budget is written generally without regional specification, so that it is impossible to know how much of it is dedicated to the settlements and how much to other parts of the country. Only special items for the settlements, which cannot be written into other general items, appear explicitly in the budget, and they amount to about NIS 2 billion.
For example, the Housing Ministry's budget is NIS 5.9 billion and it includes planning, development and construction, as well as grants and benefits to buy apartments. Part of that budget goes to settlements. The same is true for the budgets of the ministries of agriculture, industry and all the other ministries.
Priority areas -- Another way to encourage the settlements is to define them as national priority areas. Besides the ordinary budget, the government ministries also provide various benefits to communities and residents according to each ministry's map of priority areas. This budget, although it is detailed in the budget items, does not include a breakdown into areas and localities. In December 2009 the Netanyahu government decided on a map of priority areas that defined almost all of the settlements as national priority areas.
Continuing the settlements and the occupation of the territories is a controversial question in Israel. The financial price of at least NIS 2 billion a year is tremendous. But the budget remains vague and unspecific regarding the funding of the settlements. A comprehensive process is required to make the state budget transparent and clear regarding investment in the settlements. This means requiring the government ministries to report the geographic breakdown of their budget allotments and close monitoring of those figures.
Additional Reading Regarding the Cost of the Settlements:
The Burden of Occupation - A Thorough Research by www.adva.org - click here
Historical, Political and Economic Impact of the Settlements, Macro.org.il, July 2009, click here
Special Haaretz Study - the Cost of Settlements, Sep. 2003 - click here
OECD study Geographic Coverage of Israeli Data, July 2011 - click here
Settlements have cost Israel $17 Billion, Study Finds - Haaretz, 23.3.10




