The Trajtenberg Committee (
Hebrew: ועדת טרכטנברג) is a commission appointed by the Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu on August 8, 2011, in order to examine and propose solutions to Israel's socioeconomic problems. The committee was established following the
2011 Israeli housing protests
The 2011 Israeli social justice protests ( he, מְחָאַת צֶדֶק חֶבְרָתִי), which are also referred to by various other names in the media, were a series of demonstrations in Israel beginning in July 2011 involving hundreds of ...
. The committee is headed by professor
Manuel Trajtenberg, who is the chairman of the Higher Education Planning and Budget Committee.
Background
The Commission
On August 8, 2011, Prime Minister Netanyahu appointed a special committee headed by Professor Trajtenberg.
The committee is to operate for a month, during which it will hold discussions with representatives of the protesters, with civil society organizations, and with various sectors of the public. Afterwards, in mid-September, the committee will make its recommendations to the government's socio-economic cabinet, headed by Finance Minister
Yuval Steinitz and composed of 15 ministers. After that, the government will discuss the committee's conclusions.
Members
The committee includes 14 permanent members, 9 of whom are government or public officials and five of whom are from the academia and the private sector.
Two ministers,
Michael Eitan and
Limor Livnat
Limor Livnat (; born 22 September 1950) is an Israeli former politician. She served as a member of the Knesset for Likud between 1992 and 2015, and was Minister of Communications, Minister of Education, and Minister of Culture & Sport.
Biogr ...
, were appointed as observers in the committee.
* Prof.
Manuel Trajtenberg – chairman of the Higher Education Planning and Budget Committee.
* Eyal Gabai – director-general of the Prime Minister's Office.
* Prof. Eugene Kandel – the head of the National Economic Council of the Prime Minister's Office.
* Gal Hershkovitz – budget chief at the Finance Ministry.
* Dr. Avi Simhon – the finance minister's senior economic adviser.
* Michal Abadi-Boiangiu – the Finance Ministry's accountant general.
* Shahar Cohen – social entrepreneur and NOVA (Management and Academia for the Community) academic director
* Esther Dominisini –
National Insurance Institute
The National Insurance Institute (Instituto Nacional de Seguros or INS) is an autonomous institution, which was responsible for Costa Rican insurance monopoly in that country until 2008, when insurances were opened to a competitive market.
The a ...
Director General
* Dr.
Karnit Flug – Bank of Israel deputy governor (later appointed governor)
* Dr. Shlomi Frizet – Antitrust Authority chief economist
* Dr. Yoram Gabbay – Chairman of Capital Market Activists and Deputy Chairman of the Hebrew University Maurice Falk Institute for Economic Research in Israel.
* Prof. Pnina Klein – Israel Prize Laureate of the
Bar-Ilan University School of Education.
* Dr. Tali Regev – an economist from the
Taub Center for Social Policy Studies in Israel.
* Prof. Rafi Melnick – Vice President of the
Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya.
Goals
The committee was ordered to investigate:
# Proposals to change priorities in order to lighten the load of Israeli citizens.
# Implementation of a new
taxation system
A tax is a compulsory financial charge or some other type of levy imposed on a taxpayer (an individual or legal entity) by a governmental organization in order to fund government spending and various public expenditures (regional, local, or n ...
.
# Providing access to
social services
Social services are a range of public services intended to provide support and assistance towards particular groups, which commonly include the disadvantaged. They may be provided by individuals, private and independent organisations, or administe ...
.
# Increasing competition in the
Israeli economy
The economy of Israel is a developed free-market economy. The prosperity of Israel's advanced economy allows the country to have a sophisticated welfare state, a powerful modern military said to possess a nuclear-weapons capability, modern in ...
.
# Actual measures need to be taken to reduce
housing prices
Real estate appraisal, property valuation or land valuation is the process of developing an opinion of value for real property (usually market value). Real estate transactions often require appraisals because they occur infrequently and every prop ...
.
Recommendations
The committee's recommendations were published in September 2011. The recommendations were perceived to be good for the "hard-working middle classes". They included a slower increase for the defence budget. They were first discussed by the Israeli Cabinet a few days later.
Implementation and Knesset approval
Netanyahu initially promised to push the committee's recommendations through the cabinet in one piece, but there were differences inside the governing coalition and a different approach of gradual implementation was eventually adopted.
In December 2011 the Knesset approved a series of amendments to
Israel's tax law. These included an increase in the
capital gains tax rate from 20% to 25%.
As part of measures to solve the country's housing shortage, the Trajtenberg recommendations included a plan to sell land at a discount to build 5,000 units of affordable housing. The homes would be sold through the existing Mehir Lemishtaken program to people deemed eligible for affordable housing at a discount to market prices. The Trajtenberg committee had recommended mandating that in the case of families, both parents be working. The
Shas party objected to this, since it would make
Haredi families less likely to qualify. Housing minister
Ariel Atias
Ariel Atias ( he, אריאל אטיאס, born 13 November 1970) is an Israeli politician who served as a member of the Knesset for Shas, and as the country's Minister of Housing and Construction. He was also manager of Shas' kosher supervision ...
(Shas) proposed criteria that would favour Haredi applicants; this was opposed by Prof. Trajtenberg himself, who said that Atias' criteria had nothing to do with social justice. A housing plan approved by the cabinet in March 2012 included sanctions against developers that delay construction, higher municipal taxes on unoccupied homes and measures to increase the housing supply in
Arab communities.
The competition portion was approved by the cabinet in December 2011. The measures will reinforce the mandate of the anti-trust commissioner, subject the diesel and home gas markets to supervision, increase competition in the cement market, open Israeli ports up to competition, with private terminals opened in Haifa and Ashdod, and reinforce competition in the marketing of eggs, cheese and milk.
The portion of the recommendations for increasing employment were due to be brought to the cabinet for approval in February 2012. They included proposals to increase employment among
Arab citizens of Israel
The Arab citizens of Israel are the largest ethnic minority in the country. They comprise a hybrid community of Israeli citizens with a heritage of Palestinian citizenship, mixed religions (Muslim, Christian or Druze), bilingual in Arabic an ...
, particularly among Arab women, as well as proposals for integrating disabled citizens into the workforce. The plan also called for improving labor law enforcement and assisting single mothers. Other measures aimed to limit foreign workers, creating a mechanism for encouraging them to leave, mandating that employers must deposit NIS 700 of the foreign employees' pensions into a savings fund that the workers receive only upon departing Israel. It also called for setting the minimum wage for foreigners working in industry at NIS 5,300 a month, which would make them more expensive to employ and let locals compete more easily. However the Trajtenberg proposals aiming to increase
employment among the Haredi population were not included in the package. Currently only 37% of Haredi men and 49% of Haredi women work.
Other recommendations waiting for adoption include reducing the defense budget, opening up parallel imports, implementing free compulsory education for children aged 3 and 4 and providing more affordable housing.
Among sectors protected from competition from imports, the committee highlighted the cement market, 90% of which is held by Nesher. The committee argued for changing the formula for cement prices, which it said left Nesher with too much profit and blocked potential competition from imports. The committee also accused the Industry and Trade Ministry of blocking cheap cement imports in order to protect Nesher. A TV program by
Channel 10 found that Nesher was selling cement at a 40% discount to Palestinians, and employing former high-ranking officials to help it get a foot into the Palestinian cement market.
References
External links
Trajtenberg to the protesters in Tel-Aviv: No chance gov't will bury my report - The protests are too powerful(in Hebrew),
Globes
A globe is a spherical model of Earth, of some other celestial body, or of the celestial sphere. Globes serve purposes similar to maps, but unlike maps, they do not distort the surface that they portray except to scale it down. A model globe of ...
, August 14, 2011
Netanyahu names members of "socioeconomic change team" Globes
A globe is a spherical model of Earth, of some other celestial body, or of the celestial sphere. Globes serve purposes similar to maps, but unlike maps, they do not distort the surface that they portray except to scale it down. A model globe of ...
, August 8, 2011
{{Authority control
Israeli commissions and inquiries
2011 Israeli social justice protests
Economy of Israel