Global Agenda: Substance vs noise
By PINCHAS LANDAU
09/13/2012 23:57
The most important development in the Israeli economy over the last year was
not the widely reported deterioration in the budget, but the massive deterioration in the trade balance.
A trader looks at graph [illustrative] Photo: REUTERS/Tony Gentile
Let’s take the opportunity provided by the end of the Jewish year to look at the
key developments in Israel over the past year. For the overwhelming majority of
Israelis – and virtually all foreigners – the key developments are the ones
defined by the media in terms of how many column inches and air minutes were
devoted to them. By this reckoning, it is pretty obvious that the number one
topic on the Israeli agenda is the threat of a nuclear Iran, and that is closely
followed by the “tension,” or “clash,” or “confrontation” – or whatever other
term you choose – between Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Obama over what
to do about this threat.
In the narrower sphere of the Israeli economy,
it is equally obvious that the dominant issue is the rapidly widening budget
deficit and how to deal with that – whether by raising taxes, and if so, which
ones and by how much, or by cutting spending, and if so, in which areas and by
how much.
However, there is an alternative view of the outgoing year,
which is very different. It starts with the premise that the importance of any
given topic is not determined by the amount of attention given to it by the
media; if anything, the relationship is inverse: the more media hype, the less
an event or an issue is likely to be truly important from a long-term
perspective. By implication, that means that what most people think is important
is irrelevant, because their “views” and “opinions” are effectively dictated by
media brainwashing, which turns them into “sheeple.”
Thus, for example,
the most important development in the Israeli economy over the last year was not
the widely reported deterioration in the budget, but the massive deterioration
in Israel’s trade balance, as imports soared and exports actually declined. This
resulted in the country’s current account swinging into the red, for the first
time in almost a decade. The huge deficit on trade in goods actually hit a new
record in August – over $2.2 billion in a single month – but the data revealing
that, published this Wednesday, went almost unnoticed.
The reason that
the trade deficit is more important than the budget deficit can be very simply
framed: The budget and any deficit in it involves redistributing money between
Israelis, which is a matter over which, by definition, the Israeli government
has control, whereas trade and any deficit in it is between Israel and the rest
of the world, over which the Israeli government has no control.
Although
the trade deficit is a serious problem – and even potentially disastrous if
allowed to go untreated – the good news is that it is very likely to prove a
short0term one. That is because the main factors causing it are the steep rise in
the price of oil on international markets and the delay in bringing into
production Israel’s new-found natural-gas fields. These have resulted in an
increase of $2.8b. in the country’s import fuel bill in the first eight months
of this year, compared with the parallel period in 2011 (when they weren’t
exactly giving oil away free). Once the gas starts flowing from Tamar in
mid-2013 (if all goes well), the import bill will start shrinking. There is also
the problem of shrinking exports, which is a much more complex issue, but it is
amenable to action on the part of the Israeli government and the corporate
sector.
The more dramatic and much more positive developments of the year
were in the area of foreign relations, really geopolitics, but they were also
related to oil, gas and trade. One of these was the brief visit of newly
reelected Russian President Putin – his first foreign foray after his return to
the presidency, and a sharp contrast to the continued absence of Obama after
almost four years in office. Putin came to talk oil and gas with the emerging
new energy power in the Eastern Mediterranean; that’s Israel, so get used to the
idea. Israel and Cyprus present a potential competitive threat to Russia’s
dominant position as the source of Europe’s natural gas, and Putin wisely wants
to achieve some degree of cooperation as early as possible.
That’s why
it’s hardly surprising that 10 weeks later, the Russian giant Gazprom is rumored
to be interested in buying a stake in the Israeli fields. Whether that is good
for Israel, and under what circumstances, is a valid subject for national
debate, but what is not debatable is that Putin hastened here, even as his ally
Assad was struggling for survival next door. For Russia, business is business –
and there’s no room for sentiment.
The Chinese are even less prone to
sentiment. The upheaval in Egypt poses a serious potential threat to trade via
the Suez Canal – and Europe, even in its weakened state, is China’s biggest
market. That drove the Chinese government to propose, and the Israeli government
to accept, that China would build a rail cargo link from Eilat to Ashdod. That
represents a major commitment that goes far beyond the few billion dollars
involved. It is another element of the rapidly changing Middle Eastern reality –
in which Israel’s relative position is far stronger than could have been
imagined just a few years ago.
landaup@netvision.net.il