• Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us. Dry Bones pF TIE THEIR INCOMPETENT PRIME MINISTER STILL. REFUSES TO RESIGN? Editorial The Little Eligine 0 ne of the brightest secrets hid- den by the clouds of turmoil in the Middle East has been the strong, four-year growth of Israel's economy. While political turmoil, terrorism and warfare capture the headlines, Israel's 7 million residents have been quietly building an economic miracle that has recovered from the ashes of the second intifada (Palestinian uprising). Since 2002 and the end of a two-year, worldwide downturn in high-tech busi- ness, Israel has experienced steady eco- nomic expansion. According to Yaacov Fisher, a former senior economist for the Bank of Israel who has recently been touring the U.S. and Canada, in the last four years: • Israel has achieved economic growth of 5 percent or higher per year. • Foreign investment into Israeli busi- nesses has grown rapidly. • Israel has a balance of payments surplus. • The Israeli shekel has grown stronger in relation to the U.S. dollar. • Israel's stock market values have risen 83 percent since 2004, more than any other developed nation. During the same period, the Dow Jones Industrials Average in the U.S. rose 20.8 percent. A rosy picture indeed. But a few other statistics mar the bright scene. Unemployment in Israel, while at its lowest point in a decade, is still at 7.7 percent. And the shekel, which strength- ened 10 percent against the dollar in the last 12 months — it was trading at 4.01 to $1 at the end of April — is a two- edged sword. A stronger shekel makes exports more expensive for foreign buy- ers and could reduce foreign investment and tourism. And Israel's construction industry, according to Fisher, is doing so much business in Eastern Europe that it is ignoring growing needs at home. So what's a country to do? Celebrate its success while working out its problems. Jews and gentiles in southeast Michigan have taken note of what Israel has accomplished and are looking to boost our flailing economy with a bit of Israeli ingenuity. Several public and private entities are looking into attract- ing Israeli firms to the Detroit area and THEIR RUMBLING MINISTER OF DEFENSE SAYS WE'S PLANNING ANOTHER WAR?! to Michigan to spur job growth and foreign investment here. Israel has become the "little engine that could." Perhaps its success could translate into another SOMETIMES THE Israeli export: Michigan BOSS JUST LIKES jobs. TO "MESS" WITH While that is happen- PEOPLE. ing, Israel must con- tinue the success it has achieved and, at the same time, fix the problems that threaten its success. Those problems include the chronic unemploy- ment and housing issues, the hefty share of its prosperity that the vul- nerable high-tech sector maintains and the growing lack of confi- national character. dence in its political leadership. It's a tall order, but it could truly make While Israel has built a success story Israel the "light unto the nations" we in spite of what is happening on its always talk about. I I borders, it does not live in a vacuum. Its continued economic achievements would E-mail letters of no more than 150 words to: be a certainty if it can somehow solve letters@thejewishnews.com . the Palestinian puzzle and rediscover its Reality Check Shades Of Green W by all this commotion and hand-wringing about climb- ing gas prices? If you accept the idea that global warm- ing is caused in large part by automotive emissions — and the national media tell us that all right-thinking people should — this trend should be welcomed. And the higher the better. In fact, prices aren't nearly as high as they should be if cutting emissions is the goal. Europeans tax the bejeebers out of their gasoline so it's upwards of $5 a gal- lon at the pump. Canadians follow the same path. It's basic economics. If you decide it is good policy for people to use less of something, you tax it more heavily. Not only would that cut down on emis- sions, but it should go a long way toward solving the obesity problem everyone is so worked up about. With gas prices head- ing to the sky, people will either have to get out and walk more or they won't have enough money to put food on the table. Either way, fat loses. Greens should be dancing in their sandals. Or is this largely a matter of people backing such policies as long as it doesn't hurt their own wallet? Isn't moral postur- ing, after all, supposed to come cost-free? But let's not talk about that. It's a funny thing, though. The moment gas prices started to climb, all the newspapers and TV sta- tions that were praising greenness and the need to fight global warming went absolutely bonkers. The possibility of gas at $4 a gallon is regarded as catastrophic. People will have to sell their children and eat Chinese dog food. But did they really believe that there would be no economic price to be paid for the policies they suggest? The greens tell us that the planet's ecology is an inter-related whole. Change something here and the rami- fications become apparent way over there. Glaciers melt, walruses die, New York City floods. But the same is true of the economy. When car sales drop it affects the value of homes in the Detroit area because demand slackens. This in turn will cause a further drop-off in automotive sales because the construction industry will order fewer vehicles. And profits dip at GMAC because of mortgage foreclosures. Apparently, the greens believe that if they make the auto industry bear all the costs of reducing emissions by revamp- ing their fleets and spending billions on research for alternative fuels, the only ones who will get hurt are those evil industrial- ists. Who cares about them? They also seem to think that the Kyoto Agreement to reduce global warming can be effective without China signing on. In the accepted demonology, only the United States is vilified for failing to come aboard. But much of the air pollution on the West Coast is directly attributable to emissions that pour unchecked from the factories of China's growing economy. And if China does not have to consider envi- ronmental costs, what are the implications for its American competitors? But let's not talk about that. Let's talk about conspiracies, instead. The bloated prices of the oil companies. Those are the rascals who should be taxed up the wazoo. Of course, I don't recall anyone suggest- ing they should get rebates during all the years when the profits weren't there and their research costs were rising. Must have missed it. I 1 George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . May 17 y 2007 23