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BANK OF ISRAEL Office of the Spokesperson and Economic Information 13.11.2011 Press Release The Impact of Employment in Israel on the Palestinian Labor Force (2005–08) In the short term, employment in Israel increases employment and reduces unemployment among Palestinians unskilled education. The ability of unskilled Palestinian workers to earn a wage in Israel, which is high relative to the average wage in the Palestinian Authority territory, may reduce the incentive of Palestinians to accumulate human capital, and thus can impair the long term growth of the Palestinian economy. The adverse impact of employment in Israel on the return to education could be alleviated by taxing Palestinian workers in Israel. Yet, the contrast between the negligible ($ 0.5 million) income tax revenues from employment in Israel in 2010, and the $ 140 income tax collected in the West Bank points on a tax incentive for Palestinian employment in Israel, which might adversely affect both Palestinian employers and unskilled Israeli workers. Research conducted by Dr. Haggay Etkes of the Bank of Israel Research Department provides circumstantial evidence of the influence of permits for employment in Israel on the Palestinian labor force in the West Bank between 2005 and 2008. The research presents estimates of the growth in employment of unskilled Palestinians (without post secondary education) who are employed in the Israeli and Palestinian economies, and the decline in the unemployment rate among those workers, as well as the erosion in return on education. These findings indicate the positive short term effect of employment in Israel, while also showing the potential impairment to accumulating human capital and in long term growth of the Palestinian economy. Examining the effects of Palestinian employment in Israel on the Palestinian labor force takes on added importance in light of the current increase in employment permits granted for work in Israel (excluding settlements) which has occurred in recent years–so that as of the beginning of 2011, the number of permits was around 25,000–and in light of possible changes in the diplomatic and security situation, which can influence the number of permits. The research is based on analysis of a dataset that merges data from the Palestinian Labor Force Survey with Israeli administrative data on permits for employment in Israel. The merging of the two databases makes it possible to directly analyze the connection between Israeli permit policy and the Palestinian labor force in the West Bank. The findings indicate that employment with a permit serves as an important source of employment for the residents of the governorates of Tul Karm, Qalqilia, Salfit, Bethlehem, and Hebron. It should be noted that the population in the study excludes residents of the Jerusalem governorate who are included in Palestinian surveys but often do not need Israeli work permits. The study differentiates between those qualified for a permit, meaning married men aged 30–45, and those who do not qualify, meaning those aged 20–29 or not married, who were not able to receive a permit for employment due to security considerations. The research found that an increase of 100 permits in an illustrative governorate, which had 1,000 qualified (aged 30–45) and 1,000 unqualified (aged 20–29 or unmarried), was associated with: Increase in employment in general, (about 86 qualified workers), and in the Israeli economy in particular (about 50 people), and a decrease of about 60 qualified people in the number of unemployed. It is likely that the increase in employment in general is a result of partial replacement of employees who switched to work in Israel with workers who began to work in the Palestinian economy. A switch to employment in the Israeli economy of 19 qualified workers who were employed one year earlier in the Palestinian economy and of 25 qualified workers who were unemployed a year earlier. A slight increase in employment in the Israeli economy among those who did not have an employment permit. This finding contradicts the working assumption that workers with a permit for employment in Israel replace workers without such a permit. Erosion of about 13 percent in the return on education from a 5.8 percent increase in wage for each year of education to 5 percent. The findings of the research indicate that permits for employment in Israel influence unskilled workers (those without post secondary education). In that case, the erosion in return on education is a result of the increase in wage of unskilled workers. Empirical research findings from around the world show that the erosion in return on education often cuts into the acquiring of human capital and long term economic growth. Research published by World Bank economist Maurice Schiff in 2004 recommended that the Palestinian Authority mitigate the negative effects on the Palestinian economy of employment in Israel by collecting an additional tax on such employment. In actuality, most Palestinians employed in Israel, whose salary is considerably higher than the average salary in the Palestinian Authority, do not reach the threshold for paying tax in Israel, and thus do not pay income tax. In contrast, the Palestinian Authority began in recent years to collect income tax from employees in the Palestinian economy. This situation is reflected in the fact that in 2010, income tax collection in the Palestinian Authority was about $140 million, while income tax collection from Palestinian workers in Israel was about $500,000. This situation provides a de facto tax-incentive to Palestinian workers to work in Israel. This incentive is liable to negatively impact both Palestinian employers and Israeli workers who lack higher education.