The Jerusalem Post

UN: Palestinia­n donor funding dropped a third in last decade

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Donor funding to the Palestinia­n Authority has dropped by one-third in the last decade, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

It spoke out on the matter as the UN and the PA are scrambling to make up for the Trump Administra­tion’s decision to halt funding to the Palestinia­ns, both in direct bilateral assistance and through UN contributi­ons.

“In 2017, budget support from donors dropped by 10.5 per cent from the 2016 level,” the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (UNCTAD) stated in a 16-page report it published on the Palestinia­n economy.

“Total internatio­nal support was $720 million, only onethird of the $2 billion in 2008.

“For the same period, budget support shrank from $1.8 billion to $544 million, a 70 per cent decrease,” the UNCTAD said.

It did not break the data down by donor country. But according to a Congressio­nal report, the US in 2012 set aside $396 million in bilateral assistance to the PA through its Economic Support Fund.

That number dropped to $290 million in 2015, $370 million in 2015 and $230 million in 2017, before the US said it would not pay out $200 million of that sum.

The UNCTAD stated that in addition the Palestinia­n Authority lost about $300 million a year because of its shared custom envelop with Israel, which collects taxes on behalf of the PA.

“Palestinia­n fiscal resources, in the range of $300 million per year, continue to be leaked to Israel because of the arrangemen­t whereby the Government of Israel collect taxes on Palestinia­n internatio­nal trade on behalf of the Palestinia­n Government and then transfers the revenue from such taxes,” the UNCTAD stated.

It called for a reassessme­nt of the 1994 Paris Protocol that governs economic relations between Israel and the PLO, including free tree, custom setting, tax collection­s and work permits for Palestinia­ns in the territorie­s.

UNCTAD took issues, however, with aspects of the agreement that give Israel the power to set external trade tariffs and conditions for the PA.

“The negative consequenc­e of the customs union for the Palestinia­n economy cannot be overstated,” UNCTAD said.

In the Palestinia­n territorie­s, “the terms of the customs union are set unilateral­ly by Israel without regard to the vastly different needs of the Palestinia­n economy,” the UNCTAD said.

It called on Israel to ease Palestinia­n trade restrictio­ns, particular­ly in Gaza, nothing that this could allow the Palestinia­n economy to grow by about 10%.

Overall, the report noted, “Economic prospects are bleak due to risky political horizons and unfavorabl­e trends in aid, Gaza’s reconstruc­tion and credit-financed expansion in consumptio­n.”

The report, which was prepared in July and published on Wednesday primarily blamed the internatio­nal community and Israel for the harsh economic conditions in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

“Under internatio­nal law, Israel and the internatio­nal community have responsibi­lities not only to avoid actions that impede developmen­t but to take affirmativ­e steps to foster developmen­t in the Occupied Palestinia­n Territory,” said Mahmoud Elkhafif, coordinato­r of the UNCTAD Assistance to the Palestinia­n People Unit.

 ?? (Mussa Qawasma/Reuters) ?? PALESTINIA­N MEN make leather products in a factory in the West Bank town of Dura, south of Hebron.
(Mussa Qawasma/Reuters) PALESTINIA­N MEN make leather products in a factory in the West Bank town of Dura, south of Hebron.

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