, 'PI THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 19, 1985 35 lf Lunch 11 a.m. movie listings 3: Dinner 4p.m.-1 a.m. KEEGO TWIN Where Movies Cost Less Orchard Lake 8 Cass Lake Rds. Pk Mlles West of Telegraph 682-1900 Israeli proposals as "really drastic action." Wallis said Israel was acting just ahead of some economic "cataclysm or deluge" that was "inevitable" unless Israel under- took these steps. He described the Israeli proposals as "really drastic action." Israel, he added, was moving in a "coordinated, comprehensive" way to resolve its economic woes. He said it was impossible to have predicted exactly how much time Israel would have had before a total collapse. "You can't say about things like that," he said. "You never can tell. It could have been any day or longer." Wallis said Israel certainly has some potential for re-establishing a strong economic base provided that it now follows through with these proposed measures. "It now depends on how Israel carries this out," he said, noting that actually implementing eco- nomic recovery measures has been "a weakness" of the Israeli government in the past. "I think this will put Israel back on the track it was always on," he continued. He praised Israel's best natural resource — "the per- formance of its talented people." The Wall Street Journal quoted an unnamed State Department of- ficial as saying: "What we have seen suggests that they have taken some very significant steps towards stabilizing their situa- tion." He added that the actions are "stern measures that go con- siderably beyond what they have done in the past." For many months, the Reagan Administration has been urging Israel to drastically cut govern- ment spending, revise the bank- ing laws to curtail the printing of shekels to cover budget deficits, modify the elaborate cost of living indexation system, reduce gov- ernmental subsidies, and impose additional shekel devaluations to make Israeli exports more com- petitive. The Administration, in recent months, has submitted nearly $5 billion in economic and military grant assistance for Israel as part of the 1986 and 1986 fiscal year budgets. Those foreign aid re- quests are still under considera- tion in the Senate and House of Representatives. The New York Times, in a lead editorial, also welcomed the Is- raeli decisions, but insisted that Israel's long-term needs require "a heavy dose of free-market capitalism." Without it, the newspaper said, "no conceivable help from its friends is likely to save it from stagnation." The editorial, entitled "Israel's Subtler Battle," said: "Israel has often enough proved that it can mobilize against formidable mili- tary threats. Now it will learn whether it can mobilize to meet the sublter yet potentially deadly internal threat. The austerity plan announced by its Cabinet is not likely to leave people hungry. But it must sharply cut living standards if it is to make a dif- ference. Ideally, it must also jolt into flexibility an economic sys- tem long enfeebled by state inter- vention." The editorial charged that pri- vate industry in Israel "is swad- dled in enough regulation to make a Bulgarian bureaucrat blush." In the long-run, it added, Israel will need more than simply belt- tightening. "Non-defense gov- ernment spending must be re- duced enough to permit tax cuts. Inefficient public enterprises must be privatized. Most impor- tant, the protections and sub- sidies that make the government a partner in every private com- pany must be untangled." 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