Friday, April 9, 2010 - 12:41 PM

Last year -- in stories from the Wall Street Journal to the New York Times -- we saw the emergence of a narrative that Palestinians in the West Bank are living through an economic miracle. One very important missing piece of this puzzling story is Gaza and its desperate state of affairs. While this may seem like a small story in the context of much larger conflict, the economic well-being of West Bank residents has taken on increasing importance as leaders on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide are banking on economic growth as a route to a viable two-state solution, while simultaneously ignoring the situation in Gaza. If there is one thing the Palestinians certainly aren't buying, it's this "West Bank economic miracle" narrative.
Last month, I visited Israel and the West Bank to get a better understanding of the economic situation there in light of this growing narrative on peace and state-building through economic growth. As I met with entrepreneurs, business consultants, academics, American development professionals and Palestinian Authority officials, I found deep skepticism about the widely touted growth of the West Bank economy. Rather than actual development, they spoke of growth in the West Bank as "Ramallah-centric" and fueled mostly by international donor aid, which funds increased employment (in the PA, municipal governments and development projects).
It is true that the West Bank's GDP registered as one of the top 10 growth rates in the world for 2009 (seven percent) during one of the worst global recessions in history. Even so, Palestinians and Americans alike noted that any small gains made in calculating the GDP statistics of the West Bank are almost certainly offset by the economic pain of Gaza's closure. The Gaza Strip is a critical component of the Palestinian economy; without it, the West Bank loses much of its domestic market and can't benefit from cheaper Gaza imports. Unless and until Israel and Egypt can determine a way to relax import and export controls on the Gaza Strip and increase trade between it and the West Bank, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu's vision of economic peace and Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad's plan for declaring a Palestinian state in 2011 are both dead on arrival.
Israel sees the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip as a hostile entity along its border and has little interest in relaxing restrictions on the movement of goods into and out of Gaza. Egypt doesn't want to open up its border along Gaza's southern tip for fear of having Gaza become its sole responsibility. This Israeli and Egyptian blockade has produced, as Rex Brynen termed it, "a tragically peculiar economy" within the Gaza Strip. The effects of this closed economy, though, reverberate well beyond Gaza's borders.
Gaza is home to more than 1.5 million Palestinians. The West Bank has about 2.5 million residents, and there are at least another 1.5 million Arabs living in Israel, many with close family or commercial ties to the West Bank. Even if you add the Arabs living in Israel to the total market (as they are in some ways part of the Palestinian economy since they can access the West Bank and are to spend money there), then Gaza still represents 28 percent of the domestic Palestinian market. With the closure of Gaza and more stringent restrictions today on who can cross into the West Bank, businesses there are operating with a significantly diminished domestic market size. Though many Palestinian businesses conduct business within the Israeli market, increased security procedures at checkpoints along the Green Line have made shipping prohibitively expensive for all but the largest Palestinian firms.
In addition to losing Gaza as an export market for its goods, the West Bank is now increasingly reliant on more expensive Israeli produce and other basic products, some of which used to come more cheaply from Gaza. Economic linkages between Israelis and Palestinians should be encouraged, but the two economies are nowhere near on par with each other, making trade somewhat unbalanced. Losing cheap imports from Gaza won't decimate the West Bank economically, but it does add to the pain.
Even if the West Bank is able to produce enough growth to statistically overcome these trade challenges posed by Gaza's closure, it's going to be hard to convince most Palestinians that their situation has improved unless they see tangible improvements in Gaza, too. West Bank Palestinians, regardless of their political stripes, are deeply concerned about Gaza's future and think of the health of their own in economy in terms of the combined situation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
It is within Israel's and Egypt's interests to relax some of the trade flows into Gaza. As it stands now, goods coming into Gaza are smuggled through tunnels, many of which are either directly run by Hamas or are "taxed" by Hamas. Allowing the West Bank's goods into Gaza could funnel some this tunnel-based money away from Hamas and instead help bolster the West Bank's economy. This wouldn't require Israel to come to any agreements with Hamas; they could simply allow more goods in from the West Bank and rely on well-established security protocols at the checkpoints to safeguard against weapons or other dangerous materials from entering the Gaza Strip.
It's tempting for policy-makers and pundits in Washington, Israel, and even within the PA to dream of a situation in which economic development in the West Bank could lead to a peaceful resolution of conflict and the birth of a Palestinian state, while the long-term issues in Gaza are put off for another day. It certainly seems easy compared with the extremely complex prospect of settling the conflict between Israel and the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, which also requires Egyptian cooperation. Unfortunately, this is as unlikely as it is impractical. Focusing on economic growth in the West Bank, while ignoring the key role of Gaza in the Palestinian economy, is a path likely to end in failure for American, Israeli, and Palestinian efforts at peace.
Kyle Spector is a policy advisor in the National Security Program at Third Way.
Egypt should open its border with Gaza. Allow legitimate import and export
from there. Gazan can trade with the world from there and At the same time, it has to seal off the tunnels.
what about trade with Jordan ?
70% of the population there see themselves as of Palestinian origin.
Whether we like it or not, the plight of a neighbour is not something that should be ignored in whatever name. The closure of the border between Egypt and Gaza is one example that illustrates how senseless we human beings could be. Common sense dictates that we are just one human family the world over. It is a mockery to common sense that the people of the Gaza have to walk all the way on the verges of hell in terms of their economic aspirations while over the border in Egypt something could help them find their bearings. Egypt has a good reputation in the Bible when at one time it gave sanctuary to the ancestors of Israel. It gave sanctuary to Jesus. What has now changed in this tradition of caring? At the onehumanityproject, we sincerely hope that common sense will prevail. We would like to hear about the kindness of Egypt towards her neighbours. It could be one of the best lessons of caing during our time.
No government in Israel can survive making any substantive concession to Gaza until Shalit is released! It is that simple.
Not only does Mr. Spector completely ignore the open wound of Shalit's being held in captivity he ignores the hrecent history of the conflict.
Israel does not have "well-established security protocols at the checkpoints...Gaza Strip".
The Gaza entry points used to be operated by civilians. They were attacked numerous times and workers killed. This means the army will now have to operate the crossings if they are formally opened. Again this is political suicide for any government as there is virtually no interest in Israel public for having soldiers exposed to risk solely for the benefit of Gaza.
Increasingly the feeling in Israel is let Egypt deal with it but Israeli governments, out of deference to Egypt, just can't say that out loud.
following videos pretty much say it all
These are the example of the mentality that makes life cheap and glorifies killing. No one should ever forget the spontaneous reaction of Palestinians celebrating on 9/11.
a simple search will return more.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vOJCQr1Now&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMOZvbYJMvU
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/302316/palestinians_celebrating_9_11_from_cnn/
There was no Palestinian resistance till
There was no Palestinian resistance till the foreign East European Jews from Poland and Russia started arriving in Palestine in early 1900's and then started terrorising the local native population of Palestinians: Read all about the Jew terror antics and under machinations of Stern Gang here http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/565756/Stern-Gang
Mind you Stern Gang and other Jew terrorist outfits were incorporated into the most immoral army in the world the IDF, which of course has kept up the practice of terrorising the Palestinians and also all neighbouring countries in keeping with the tradition.
Here is another example of Jewish love for Palestinians and other Muslim neighbours far and wide: http://lalqila.wordpress.com/2010/03/20/israel%e2%80%99s-chronology-of-nuclear-stockpiling-from/
Gaza’s place in the West Bank “miracle”
Yeah, just look into the eyes of the children whose house has been bombed by the immoral Jewish leaders and rented "soldiers" with the connivance of American tax payers and then try to call yourself civilised.
Real soldiers fight other soldiers; only sociopaths attack civilians.

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