The Jerusalem Post

‘How would they feel if it happened to them?’

- • By HAGAY HACOHEN • Jerusalem Post Staff

The daily news reports describe the one million Israelis who are out of work as members of what will become a “lost generation” of young people deprived of entry-level jobs and who are now unable to support themselves through school. However, according to research by the Israel Democracy Institute, 50% of job seekers are older – between the ages of 30 and 54.

IDI’s Center for Governance and the Economy Director Daphna Aviram Nitzan said that many of these people owned and ran family businesses that are now fated to close. Others work in industries that were demolished by the pandemic, such as tourism or travel.

Take Alex Stein, a British-Israeli in his late 30s who was a self-employed tour-guide before the pandemic, and has been out of work since it started. He expressed anger over

After a year of attacks by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s son Yair, the Wexner Foundation responded Thursday that Jeffrey Epstein did not play a significan­t role or contribute any money to the nonprofit organizati­on.

The foundation said Epstein held an administra­tive role that was confined to transferri­ng money from the Wexner family to the foundation. He filled this role from 1992 until 2007, when the family cut off ties after the indictment drafted against him.

One of the Wexner Foundation’s programs is the Israel Fellowship, which each year sends 10 outstandin­g public sector directors and leaders from Israel for a master’s in public administra­tion at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Netanyahu’s attacks on the foundation have been viewed as an attempt to undermine its graduates, many of whom serve in high-ranking public service positions, including in the Justice Ministry and the State Prosecutor’s Office, now trying his father for bribery. Graduates include Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi, Health Ministry director-general Prof. Hezi Levi and former head of Military Intelligen­ce Amos Yadlin.

Last July, for example, Yair Netanyahu tweeted to the US Attorney’s Office in New York: “Hi guys please check his connection­s to Wexner institute registered in Ohio. Also @ barak_ehud might be an interest for your investigat­ion I’m sure he got some interestin­g informatio­n.”

In another tweet, he called on journalist­s to investigat­e the Wexner Foundation’s activities in Israel and its connection­s to Epstein and former prime minister Ehud Barak.

Epstein was a trustee of the foundation, which has given hundreds of millions of dollars to Jewish organizati­ons in the US and Israel, from 1992 to 2007. He was also a money manager during that time for Leslie Wexner, the foundation’s benefactor.

The foundation also took on allegation­s promoted by the prime minister regarding a $2 million payment made to Barak in 2004 for what was described as a research program. Barak was not serving in office at the time.

It said Barak was commission­ed to write two studies on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and leadership. He submitted the first study of 267 pages and a summary of the second study. The foundation leadership in the US decided to pay Barak just over $2m. for both studies and reported the payment in its IRS filings. what he feels is a lack of effort by the Tourism Ministry to provide direction to people in his predicamen­t.

Unlike some others, Stein said he has gotten support from both the Tax Authority and the National Insurance Institute. But he said that he feels there has been a lack of sensitivit­y on the part of the government.

“These people should think what it’s like to have your job simply vanish overnight, how hard it is, how would they feel if it would happen to them?” he said.

Some 170,000 people were officially unemployed before the virus hit, Aviram Nitzan said. She explained that there is “no way the country can offer unemployme­nt benefits for one million people and leave it at that. If employers aren’t re-hiring their people now it’s because they can’t afford to pay them or they don’t need them. There is no point in offering ongoing support to businesses for no good reason.”

Instead, Nitzan suggested that unemployme­nt benefits should be introduced as part of new vocational training programs that will encourage people to gain new skills or take on new career paths.

“The average Israeli worker,” she told The Jerusalem Post, “lacks digital orientatio­n and English language skills when compared to his counterpar­t in other OECD countries. This means that a factory owner might invest in new machinery, but some workers are unable to operate them because the instructio­ns are in English.”

New educationa­l programs could train those seeking a career in green energies, as the nation is due to present to the UN Climate Change conference a working plan on how it intends to tackle global climate changes, Nitzan offered.

“We could use the year to train the workers we will need to carry out such a plan,” she said, “as it is likely to be approved and funded.”

Beyond education, Nitzan said that Israel’s economy is plagued by bureaucrac­y, with up to 80% of the work needed to start a new business spent working through it and the average time to build a factory being five years.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Finance Minister Israel Katz have vowed that grants are on the way “directly to your bank accounts,” but so far, most Israelis say these grants have not arrived.

Dov (real name withheld) told the Post that he only got a grant on Thursday after losing 100% of his business in March.

Once the head of an exhibition production company, he has not worked since exhibition­s were halted.

“The business is closed,” Dov said, “and with it the five fulltime workers and the 10 parttime workers that drew a paycheck from it are gone.”

He had run the company for 15 years.

Dov slammed the government for being “awful, uncaring,” and said that he has been taking part in the mass protests against the government because “people have nothing to eat.”

When Nitzan was asked about the workers’ rage, which includes calls not to pay taxes or even follow Health Ministry coronaviru­s guidelines, she said it is a real danger to democracy. But Nitzan admitted this rage likely surfaces out of desperatio­n. She said that “people feel helpless,” which is why “the state should offer options and financial motivation­s to pursue them.”

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 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? A WOMAN walks by a recruitmen­t office, yesterday. Reports describe the one million Israelis out of work as members of a ‘lost generation’ of young people, deprived of entry-level jobs and unable to support themselves through school.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) A WOMAN walks by a recruitmen­t office, yesterday. Reports describe the one million Israelis out of work as members of a ‘lost generation’ of young people, deprived of entry-level jobs and unable to support themselves through school.

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