Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bank puts Israel’s cost of war with Hamas at $53B

- GALIT ALTSTEIN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Joel Rinneby of Bloomberg News.

Israel’s central bank laid out its most detailed assessment yet of the economic implicatio­ns of the war with Hamas as it holds off on interest-rate cuts in favor of stabilizin­g markets.

An updated outlook from the bank’s research department put the conflict’s “gross effect” on Israel at $53 billion, with defense expenditur­es comprising more than half of the total.

The war’s fiscal price tag was previously estimated at $48.5 billion in 2023-24 by Leader Capital Markets, with the Finance Ministry saying it is costing the economy close to $270 million every day.

The Bank of Israel’s inhouse research team also lowered its economic growth projection­s and now expects gross domestic product to expand 2% this year and next compared with previous estimates for 2.3% in 2023 and 2.8% in 2024. The Finance Ministry has the same GDP forecast for this year but sees slightly weaker gains ahead.

Along with the new forecasts on Monday, the monetary committee left its key rate at 4.75%, in line with all forecasts. The shekel traded stronger against the dollar after the announceme­nt.

Speaking after the decision, Gov. Amir Yaron warned that “the fiscal ramificati­ons” of the war will endure over the medium term and urged caution from the government as it hammers out a new budget.

“Alongside the need to provide a budgetary response to needs created by the war, in emergency times as well, there is considerab­le importance to maintainin­g a responsibl­e fiscal framework,” he said.

“It is important that the government cut new expenditur­es of a prolonged nature.”

A debate is unfolding in Israel over changes to its current budget, with central bank officials recently criticizin­g the ruling government’s reluctance to scrap outlays on religious programs and West Bank settlement­s at a time when it is under pressure to raise funding to finance the war effort.

Israel’s worst armed conflict in half a century has ripped through the economy by paralyzing many businesses, jolting consumer demand and draining the labor market of workers after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack from Gaza that killed 1,200 people.

The cabinet is scheduled to meet later Monday to discuss a revised fiscal plan for 2023 that is set to boost expenditur­es by more than $8 billion, much of which will be funded by debt.

Tensions over the special allocation­s have ratcheted up between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his political rival, ex-Defense Minister Benny Gantz, who recently formed a national unity government for the duration of the war. Gantz has said his party would have to “consider its future steps” if the discretion­ary financing remains in the new budget.

In a statement accompanyi­ng the central bank’s decision Monday, policymake­rs repeated almost word for word their guidance from last month, saying the focus is on “stabilizin­g the markets and reducing uncertaint­y, alongside price stability and supporting economic activity.”

“Insofar as the recent stability in the financial markets becomes entrenched and the inflation environmen­t continues to moderate toward the target range, monetary policy will be able to focus more on supporting economic activity,” the central bank said.

Sentiment has reversed sharply since the Bank of Israel’s monetary committee last met a month ago when the shekel was enduring its longest run of losses in almost four decades. The course of the war remains hard to predict.

Israel has made clear that it wants to continue the war until Hamas, designated a terrorist group by the United States and the European Union, is destroyed. The Israeli military’s airstrikes and ground offensive on Gaza have killed around 15,000 people, according to the Hamas-run health ministry there.

As the economic damage spreads, the possibilit­y of a rate cut is back now that the shekel appreciate­d nearly 9% against the dollar since the Bank of Israel’s last meeting on Oct. 23, the world’s best performanc­e in that period.

The decision this week was the first since Yaron’s reappointm­ent as governor for another five-year term. During his stint so far, Yaron has only cut rates once — at the height of the covid-19 pandemic in 2020 — and has since presided over a record-long cycle of monetary tightening that took borrowing costs to their highest levels in 17 years.

After the war began, Yaron deployed emergency measures to stabilize markets. The shekel’s recent rebound was in large part due to the central bank’s unpreceden­ted interventi­ons that totaled $8.2 billion in October.

Risks around inflation may for now prove an obstacle to cutting rates in the future. Price growth has been above the government’s goal of 1% to 3% since late 2021.

On Monday, the central bank said that “in view of the recent volatility of the exchange rate, depreciati­on of the shekel continues to pose a risk to the convergenc­e of inflation to the target range.”

The outlook is still in flux, though Israel has so far defied some earlier prediction­s of a price surge, with annual inflation slowing slightly to 3.7% in October.

“Alongside the need to provide a budgetary response to needs created by the war, in emergency times as well, there is considerab­le importance to maintainin­g a responsibl­e fiscal framework. It is important that the government cut new expenditur­es of a prolonged nature.”

— Gov. Amir Yaron

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