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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University -
Ran HaCohen
(Dept of Comparative Literature)
blames Israel for all Palestinian Problems
Keep Israel out of elite economic club
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9619.shtml
By Ran
HaCohen
The
Electronic Intifada
17 June
2008
Israel’s ruling elite now has a major
aspiration: to join the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) as a member country. For the sake of the Israelis
and of their neighbors, this aspiration should be thwarted by an
international campaign of all supporters of peace; and, in fact, by
supporters of the free market as well.
The Paris-based OECD, according to its own
website, ‘brings together the governments of countries committed to
democracy and the market economy from around the world.’ Established
in 1961, the OECD has 30 member countries, including most European
states, the US, Canada and Japan, but not Russia, Brazil or India --
at least not yet. With a huge budget of 342 million Euro it is one
of the most prestigious clubs of nations. Indeed, membership is
predominantly a matter of prestige, since unlike the World Bank or
the International Monetary Fund, the OECD does not dispense grants
or make loans. But prestige means investors’ trust, and investors’
trust means money. Big money.
Israel's economic elite is intent on achieving
the international recognition and prestige that accompanies OECD
membership. As demonstrated by the Israeli Ministry of Finance’s
special website to promote their membership to the OECD, with
details on dozens of working groups, committees, boards and centers,
all participating in the national effort to achieve the desired
membership. Among other things, the government website claims that
‘Israel shares the same attachment to the basic values of open
market economy and democratic pluralism,’ as expected from an OECD
member country.
Israel’s commitment to democracy is, of course,
fairly limited. The deficiencies are well-known -- ranging from lack
of separation between State and Religion (banning inter-confessional
marriage, for example) to the extensive use of ‘administrative
detention,’ i.e. jailing persons for months and years without any
charge or trial. On the other hand, several other countries with a
highly dubious human rights record, like the US and Turkey, are
already OECD members; so the organization itself seems not to take
its stated commitment to democracy all too seriously. Focusing on
democracy and human rights issues in this context -- important as
they are -- might be playing the wrong card.
A better question for the OECD should be
whether Israel can be classified as a free market economy. The
answer is: clearly not. If the OECD takes Israel in as a member
country, it would prove its commitment to free market economy to be
nothing but a joke.
The misconception is anchored in an optical
fallacy that seeks to separate ‘smaller Israel’ from the Occupied
Palestinian Territories. If we could imagine ‘smaller Israel’ as an
economic unit, one could perhaps claim it was a free economy.
However, there is no ‘smaller Israel,’ just as there is no economic
unit called ‘smaller Israel.’
With Israel at 60, the memories of its first 19
years as ‘smaller Israel’ (1948-1967) are a remote past, fading even
in the minds of the small group of elderly Israelis who grew up in
it. The overwhelming majority of Israelis, and Palestinians for this
matter too, never knew an occupation-free Israel. It is impossible,
both practically and theoretically, to consider Israel without the
occupied territories, simply because there is no such Israel. And
this is not just a political, psychological or historical fact: it
is a clear, tangible economic fact. The economy of the Occupied
Palestinian Territories is part and parcel of the Israeli economy.
An attempt to view Israel’s economy separately from that of the
occupied territories is futile and unserious, not to say ludicrous.
This was an obvious statement 20 years ago,
during Israel’s direct occupation of the territories. At that time,
the Palestinian market was swallowed by the Israeli economy.
Palestinians worked in Israel, paid taxes in Israel, and the entire
economy of the West Bank and Gaza were (mis)governed by Israel --
through the army and various other Israeli organs.
The establishment of a ‘Palestinian Authority’
(PA) by the Oslo Agreements in the 1990s has created an illusion as
if the Palestinians practically have ‘their own state,’ or at least
run ‘their own economy.’ Indeed, Palestinians now pay taxes to the
PA, which has its own budget, etc. However, this alleged
independence -- especially in an economic sense -- is all but an
illusion, as any observer, let alone any serious expert, would be
compelled to admit. In fact, Palestinians cannot move a single sack
of rice from one place to another without permission from Israel,
the ‘free economy’ champion.
The Palestinian territories have no central
bank, nor their own currency or monetary sovereignty: they are
dependent on the Israeli shekel. Nor do they have declared and
internationally recognized borders nor geographic contiguity, a
precondition for defining an economic unit. The
Palestinian-controlled enclaves are encircled, divided and separated
by Israeli roadblocks and by Israeli-controlled areas, like roads
closed to Palestinian traffic, Israeli settlements, army facilities
etc. Only Israel can decide whether a Palestinian laborer,
businessman or entrepreneur may move from one point to another --
within his allegedly independent economic unit. The same holds for
goods of any kind. Moving a sack of rice from ‘Palestinian’ Hebron
to ‘Palestinian’ Bethlehem, both cities located in the West Bank, is
dependent on Israeli permissions -- for the owner, for the driver,
for the truck and for the product. If this goes together with a
‘commitment to free economy,’ then Zimbabwe and North Korea can join
OECD just as much.
Israel governs the Palestinian economy not only
from within, but also from without. The ‘Palestinian economy’ -- in
fact a small (five percent) sub-sector of the Israeli economy -- is
physically and economically encircled by Israel. According to the
1994 Paris Protocol, Israel has a say on the import of any goods
into the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Israel alone decides what
can be moved (be it wheat, oil, or advanced medical equipment), as
well as how much of it, and where from. Given its control on all
access gates to the territories (sea, land and air), Israel can
physically stop any import; the Palestinians have no effective
economic control whatsoever. All this holds for Palestinian export
as well. In addition, Israel also sets the taxation (customs, etc.)
on goods imported by the Palestinians, so that even the
Palestinians’ fiscal policy is in Israel’s hands. Israel is also the
one who effectively levies those customs on Palestinian imports,
officially ‘on behalf of the Palestinians.’ This means that the tax
money goes to the PA -- that is, if and when Israel chooses to keep
its obligation to transfer it.
Last week, for example, Israel delayed the
monthly transfer of Palestinian tax money (some $75 million) -- this
time as a ‘punishment’ for the appointed PA Prime Minister Salam
Fayyad’s letter to the OECD, requesting it not to accept Israel as a
member. Even this measure alone, which caused tens of thousands of
Palestinian employees not to get their wages on time, should be
enough to disqualify Israel from an OECD-membership. At any rate, it
is an excellent demonstration of Israel’s deep-rooted contempt to
free economy (based on keeping signed agreements) and to democratic
values (especially freedom of expression).
All this has far-reaching implications for
Israel’s supposedly ‘free’ and ‘open’ economy. In complete
contradiction to the very basics of free economy, Israel holds the
Palestinians as a captive market. Since the Palestinians cannot
import freely, Israel forces them to buy Israeli goods. From fruit
and vegetables to plumbing equipment and cement, the Palestinians
serve as a dumping market for Israeli goods (often second-class),
thus ensuring that Israeli producers have captive consumers, just
like in the days of 19th century colonialism. Israel’s economy would
have looked totally different if an Israeli dairy giant, or any
other Israeli business, did not have seven million Israeli
customers, as well as a captive market of 3.5 million Palestinians.
The OECD would therefore make a mockery of its
own principles if it allows Israel to join. However, the real issue
is not the OECD, but the people of Israel/Palestine. If Israel is
allowed to join the OECD, it would be a precious reward for the very
elite that runs the political, military and economic occupation of
the Palestinian territories: their 19th century-stile colonialist
practices would get the stamp of 21st century ‘free market economy.’
If, on the other hand, the OECD turns Israel down, it would be a
clear signal that occupation and colonialism cannot go hand-in-hand
with free market and with international prestige; and that if Israel
wants to join the prestigious club of nations, it should end the
occupation first. Therefore everyone committed to peace in the
Middle East -- from law experts and economists to private citizens
and non-governmental organizations -- should put pressure on the
OECD to keep Israel out until it ends the occupation.
Dr. Ran HaCohen was born in the Netherlands
in 1964 and grew up in Israel. He has a BA in Computer Science, an
MA in Comparative Literature, and his PhD is in Jewish Studies. He
is a university teacher in Israel. He also works as a literary
translator (from German, English and Dutch).
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