The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Sat Mar 13 2010
Departments
International Issues

Palestinian economy: from bad to wretched
by Ramzy Baroud
September 29, 2008

The numbers are grim, whether in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip. The Palestinian economy is in one of its most wretched states, and the disaster is mostly, if not entirely manmade, thus reversible.

The World Bank made no secret of the fact that Israeli restrictions are largely to blame, as poverty rates in the Gaza Strip and West Bank have soared to 79.4 per cent and 45.7 per cent respectively. It concluded: "With a growing population and a shrinking economy, real per capita GDP is now 30 per cent below its height in 1999." "With due regard to Israel's security concerns, there is consensus on the paralytic effect of the current physical obstacles placed on the Palestinian economy," it added.

With a declining economy, lack of developmental projects and Israeli restrictions, Palestinians are increasingly reliant on foreign aid, which is largely controlled by political interests. For example, the US proved more generous than ever in supporting the Ramallah-based government of Mahmoud Abbas as it led an international regime of sanctions and embargo against the Gaza-based Hamas government. Such funds are often conditioned on such murky concepts as "cracking down on the terrorist infrastructure", which is duly understood as fighting those who challenge Israel and Palestinian Authority (PA) rule in the West Bank.

Nonetheless, even if the PA had no history of corruption and genuinely intended to invest in a sustainable economy, no truly free and independent economy can flourish under occupation, whose very intention is the disempowerment of Palestinian workers, farmers and the middle class. It is these strata of Palestinian society that have led the struggle to end the occupation on the one hand and to resist local corruption on the other.

Indeed, Israeli restrictions are not coincidental and hardly confined to the classic reasoning pertaining to national security. "In reality, these restrictions go beyond concrete and earth-mounds, and extend to a system of physical, institutional and administrative restrictions that form an impermeable barrier against the realisation of Palestinian economic potential," the World Bank said. It concluded that more aid would not revive the Palestinian economy, unless the above restrictions are removed.

But these restrictions represent the backbone of Israeli policy; removing them would deny the Israeli government political leverage over Abbas's government. By extension, the US is in no mood to help Palestinians develop a strong economic base and infrastructure, enough to spare Palestinians the indignity of living on international donor handouts.

In the West Bank, Palestinian economic woes are compounded by a terrible water crisis, a nightmare for farmers who are already struggling to endure Israeli water theft and disproportionate water distribution. According to a recent report by the Israeli human rights group B'tselem, an Israeli household consumes on average 3.5 times as much water as a Palestinian household. The group blames Israel for its discriminatory policy and tight restrictions that prevent Palestinians from drilling new wells. One fails to see how Israel's "security" concerns can ever justify Israel's plundering of Palestinian water using West Bank aquifers while many Palestinian families in cities like Jenin have been denied water since April.

While many farmers found themselves unable to preserve their livelihoods, ordinary people have to spend a significant proportion of their meagre incomes buying water. A recent UN report, cited by news agencies, estimated that Palestinians in the hardest-hit communities spend 30 to 40 per cent of their incomes to purchase water delivered by trucks. How can a sustainable economy with a sensible growth level be achieved under these circumstances?

If the situation is difficult in the West Bank, it's impossible in Gaza. A report in March sponsored by Amnesty International, Care International UK, Christian Aid, Oxfam and others, described the situation in the Strip as the worst humanitarian crisis since the Israeli occupation of 1967. The report called on Israel to change its policies towards Gaza. A few months following the release of the report, Israel seems to be stiffening its control over the impoverished Strip, rendering its hapless 1.5 million inhabitants more miserable by the day.

According to the report, 80 per cent of the Gaza population relies on food assistance. Some 1.1 million people receive their food aid from UN agencies, which are themselves struggling to operate under fuel cuts and the near-total isolation of Gaza.

Unlike the West Bank, Gaza's aim is hardly economic development but mere survival. Gaza's reliance on food aid has increased tenfold since 1999, according to the report. Concurrently, 98 per cent of Gaza's factories are no longer functioning, leaving thousands unemployed and wreaking havoc on the income of numerous families.

Coupled with inner-Palestinian violence, US-led international sanctions and the perpetual Israeli siege and violence are destroying the very fabric of Palestinian society in Gaza while turning the West Bank into a charity-based society, with funds provided largely as political incentives with hardly any long-term vision.

Equally disheartening is that the PA in the West Bank has actively shut down Muslim charities, kindergartens, orphanages and schools in the ongoing tit-for-tat action between rivals Fatah and Hamas. It's intolerable that the animosity between both parties has reached a point of victimising the most unfortunate in society: orphans, widows and the physically and mentally impaired. Some 82 children didn't return to school this year -- they were killed in the previous year. And over one million students will have to negotiate their way around 600 Israeli military checkpoints. With the shutting down of Muslim charity-run schools, hundreds of students will lose their right to education. But this time, Israel is not the one entirely to blame.

Palestinians cannot survive on handouts through a charity- like economic system. They need, and deserve, sustainable economic development, with a long-term vision, one that can overhaul the economies of the West Bank and Gaza and make use of the precious human resources available. Israel will do its utmost to undermine such a possibility, as it has done for decades. This represents the very struggle that Palestinians are undergoing: between their need to break free, and Israel's insistence on maintaining its matrix of control. Without proper channels to empower the Palestinian individual and community, Palestinians will remain economically disadvantaged and thus politically handicapped. This is hardly a recipe for an equitable, lasting peace with justice.

---
Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Don't forget to check out articles from 2009 and 2010

International Issues

"American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee condemns Gaza attacks"
  December 30, 2008
  Marvin Wingfield

"Witnessing the decay of Western hegemony and the role of the organic"
  December 28, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

"Iraq's US security charade"
  December 4, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Yellow-shirt mob seizes Bangkok's International Airport"
  November 29, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Gaza: salvation in a news broadcast"
  November 28, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"A funny thing happened to me on my way to the Damascus Conference"
  November 23, 2008
  Cynthia McKinney

"Bangkok dangerous: bombs, sleaze and paralysis"
  November 21, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Will the young rescue unions?"
  November 16, 2008
  Dick Meister

"What does Iran have to do with your town? Here's what it has to do with mine"
  November 13, 2008
  David Swanson

"Playgrounds for Palestine: one marathon at a time"
  November 6, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"World food day: global crises’ double standards"
  October 24, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Unofficial referendum in Vicenza, Italy: 95% opposed to new U.S. base"
  October 8, 2008
  Enzo Ciscato

"Grassroots movements, global elites and political economy in times of panic"
  October 7, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

"The war to promote terror"
  October 4, 2008
  Robert C. Koehler

"Palestinian economy: from bad to wretched"
  September 29, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Predator and prey"
  August 21, 2008
  Robert C. Koehler

"Family politics and the new Gaza crisis"
  August 20, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Harper again serves as Bush's mouthpiece in Canada."
  August 19, 2008
  Jim Miles

"Thaksin is the world's newest international fugitive"
  August 19, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Global trends that will shape the next decade"
  August 12, 2008
  Muqtedar Khan

"Obama joins the club"
  August 3, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Revealing a massacre, or stating the obvious"
  July 22, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Rabbi Lerner invited by Saudi King to International Interfaith Conference"
  July 15, 2008
  Tikkun

"On Iran And Mideast peace: Who is Obama trying to please?"
  June 16, 2008
  Jalal Alavi

"Burma blames Suu Kyi & fake donors for cyclone riots"
  June 2, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Suu Kyi amid Burma's cyclone"
  May 27, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Coexistence, not Apartheid"
  May 27, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"60 years of denial "
  May 17, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"Enemies Burma & America meet over cyclone aid"
  May 14, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Burma stages a vote while cyclone victims suffer"
  May 11, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"The grim reality of economic truths"
  May 10, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

"Burma blocks aid, fearing subversive foreigners"
  May 9, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"USAID team"
  May 9, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Burma not thankful for U.S. warships offering cyclone aid"
  May 7, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Cyclone help for Irrawaddy Delta survivors "
  May 6, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Coups & superstitions"
  May 6, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Trip report by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter to Israel, Palestine, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan"
  May 4, 2008
  President Jimmy Carter

"As Italy’s elections go from bad to worse, Vicenza remains the silver lining "
  May 3, 2008
  Stephanie Westbrook

"National Lawyers Guild urges Israel to permit Richard Falk to enter Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories"
  April 26, 2008
  David Gespass, NLG

"America's secret plan to nuke Vietnam & Laos"
  April 15, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"The Spanish 'adios'"
  April 6, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

"What else is on?"
  March 17, 2008
  Tim Buchholz

"Dayton stands (and rocks) for Darfur"
  March 13, 2008
  Christina Dendy

"The day after the bombing of Iran"
  March 13, 2008
  David Swanson

"Kosovo Brief"
  March 12, 2008
  Ivan Simic

"Kathmandu blackout"
  March 4, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Inequality, not identity, fuels violence in Kenya"
  February 10, 2008
  Diana Duarte

"Gandhism is alive and expanding"
  February 4, 2008
  Jesse Jackson

"Guantanamo as a symbol"
  January 20, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

"The eternal underdog"
  January 19, 2008
  Robert C. Koehler

"A perspective on relations with Somalia"
  January 4, 2008
  IGC

"Let’s toast to ten good things about 2007 "
  January 1, 2008
  Madea Benjamin

"Machiavellian Musharraf"
  January 1, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud




Read Articles by Year:
2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2010
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer