The Jerusalem Post

Israel investing in Harvard ‘cluster’ economics program

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Israel will invest up to a billion shekels in a new Economy Ministry program to build industry “clusters” modeled after Harvard professor Michael E. Porter’s economic model.

The program identifies core sectors and helps them to collaborat­e and develop growth plans, including the potential for public-private investment­s in companies in these areas. For every $3 invested by the private sector in approved companies, the government will invest $1, making investing in Israeli companies “one of the best and low-risk investment­s you can make,” according to Economy Minister Nir Barkat.

The process for applying for funding has yet to be establishe­d.

For the last two weeks, Barkat and a team of American experts from Harvard University have been in Israel preparing for the program, for which Barkat plans to reveal a complete working plan sometime next month. The experts met with all relevant ministries, such as Finance, Energy and Tourism, held business roundtable­s and spoke with local authoritie­s.

According to Barkat, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich back the program, including matching sectors with internatio­nal partners.

“We will create leads and open doors,” Barkat told a group of journalist­s. “The goal is to invest as quickly as possible and to build many public-private partnershi­ps.”

The Economy Ministry already has NIS 400 million earmarked for the program. Barkat said the rest would come from other ministers or government grants. In addition, the program will have a dashboard and other tracking tools to monitor progress and success.

“With matching grants, you reduce risk, and the ROI is better,” Barkat said.

The team has already started identifyin­g geographic and industry sectors in Israel. These include agritech, foodtech and tourism in the Galilee and Golan Heights; biblical tourism and technology in Judea and Samaria, sea biology and desert tourism in Eilat; med-tech in Haifa; life sciences in Jerusalem; desert-tech and cyber in the Negev; and fintech nationally, among other fields.

The clusters are areas where Israel already sees success, and the country believes they will grow with a suitable investment.

In an article published in Harvard Business Review, Porter explained that “today’s economic map of the world is dominated by what I call clusters: critical masses – in one place – of unusual competitiv­e success in particular fields. Clusters are a striking feature of virtually every national, regional, state and even metropolit­an economy, especially in more economical­ly advanced nations. Silicon Valley and

Hollywood may be the world’s bestknown clusters.”

Another example of a cluster is the California wine cluster, which Porter said includes 680 commercial wineries and several thousand independen­t wine grape growers.

Clusters increase productivi­ty, drive the direction and pace of innovation and stimulate the formation of new businesses, according to Porter.

“I have been working with the clustering process for 20 years and have seen it work in many countries. It not only produces results but is logical,” said Martin Webber, one of the consulting experts, during the press briefing.

Barkat rolled out a similar project when he was mayor of Jerusalem from 2008 to 2018 to help build the city’s hi-tech industry, and it worked. Jerusalem had 10,000 people working in hi-tech when the project started. Today, there are 22,000 - mostly in research.

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