Fighting in Gaza.

War spending sees Israel budget deficit skyrocket to 4.2% of GDP in 2023

In December, the deficit was 33.8 billion shekels ($9.0 billion), versus 18.5 billion a year earlier, as spending on the war was 17.2 billion shekels, while tax revenue slipped 8.4%

Israel posted a budget deficit of 4.2% of gross domestic product in 2023, after a 0.6% surplus in 2022, due to a spike in state spending to finance the war against Palestinian terrorist group Hamas in Gaza, the finance ministry said on Thursday.
The deficit rose from an annual 3.4% in November.
In December, the deficit was 33.8 billion shekels ($9.0 billion), versus 18.5 billion a year earlier, as spending on the war was 17.2 billion shekels, while tax revenue slipped 8.4%.
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צוות הקרב של חטיבת גבעתי ב חאן יונס חיילים לוחמים צה"ל מלחמת עזה 9.1.24
צוות הקרב של חטיבת גבעתי ב חאן יונס חיילים לוחמים צה"ל מלחמת עזה 9.1.24
Fighting in Gaza.
(Photo: IDF)
Lawmakers last month approved a war budget for 2023 of around 30 billion shekels and cabinet ministers on Sunday are set to start debate and vote on a revised 2024 budget of tens of billions of shekels in extra funds that is expected to push the budget deficit to some 6% this year.
On Wednesday, Bank of Israel Governor Amir Yaron urged the government to stick to fiscal discipline and offset planned spending with reductions to non-essential areas while raising some taxes.
He estimated the Gaza war would cost 210 billion shekels for defense and compensation, excluding loss of income, for residents near the Gaza and Lebanese borders who have been displaced by months of cross-border rocket fire.
Israel last year approved a two-year budget for 2023 and 2024, but the war against Hamas in Gaza has shaken government finances, requiring budget changes and additional spending.
The deficit last year reached 77.5 billion shekels.
Israel's initial 2023 deficit target was 0.9% of GDP, or 16.9 billion shekels, with tax revenue 30 billion shekels lower than planned and spending of 516 billion shekels also 30 billion above projections. The deficit topped a 3.7% estimate in the revised budget approved last month.
Before the war that began on October 7, the deficit was 1.5% of GDP in September.