Difference between revisions of "Israel Center for Social and Economic Progress"

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The Israel Center for Social & Economic Progress 'an independent pro-market public policy think tank since 1984'[http://www.icsep.org.il/]
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The '''Israel Center for Social and Economic Progress''' (ICSEP) is "an independent pro-market public policy think tank" set up in 1984<ref>'About us', [http://www.icsep.org.il/en/about ICSEP website]</ref> and it has a number of board members connected to neoconservative causes and free market fundamentalism.
  
The late [[Arthur Seldon]] was a member of The Israel Center for Social & Economic Progress (ICSEP) run by [[Daniel Doron]] a former Israeli intelligence officer and Special Consultant to the US Embassy in Tel Aviv. The US ICSEP board includes [[Irving Kristol]], while the UK ICSEP has, Sir [[Stanley Kalms]] (ex-Treasurer of Conservative Party), [[Lord Harris]] ([[Institute for Economic Affairs]]), [[Lord Young]] ([[British Telecom]], [[Cable & Wireless]], and [[British Aerospace]]) and Sir [[David Alliance]] (who paid the Labour Party more than £5,000 for dinner tickets in 1998) and [[Gerald Ronson]] the convicted fraudster.  
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It claims that its work 'facilitates crucial economic reforms and helps overcome resistance to them'. It considers Israel to be 'plagued by painful social, economic and political problems rooted in its socialist-statist system' and states that its mission is 'to help Israel realize its enormous potential by freeing its economy from the shackles of this regressive system'.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/support/ Support: Why Support ICSEP?], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref> Its motto is 'Where there is no bread, there is no Torah.'
  
[[Richard Fox]] — is part of Fitch's [[Sovereign group]] which rates Israel's economy.  
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ICSEP has been praised by Israel's Prime Minister [[Benjamin Netanyahu]], President [[Shimon Peres]], former Deputy Prime Minister of Industry and Trade [[Natan Sharansky]] and by [[Milton Friedman]], widely considered to be the father of free-market economics. Friedman said:
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::ICSEP is like a breath of fresh air… It deserves the support of all of us who are deeply committed to the survival of a strong and healthy Israel.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/praise/P0/ Praise], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
  
[[David Lewis]] (one of its UK 'friends') is also a member of the [[Conservative Friends of Israel]]
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The centre was founded by former Israeli intelligence officer [[Daniel Doron]] who remains ICSEP's director.
  
From ICSEP's website:
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==History==
Board of Advisors
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ICSEP says that since its inception it has 'led the effort in creating a consensus for economic liberalization and deregulation'. Its right wing credentials have been clear from the start and are evidenced by the personnel involved in the organisation.
  
ICSEP, founded in 1983 as an independent pro-market public policy thinktank, has an Israeli Board of Advisors comprised of over forty of the country's most distinguished economists, jurists and social scientists. ICSEP is completely non-partisan, its board members representing all Israel's universities and a broad spectrum of opinions. All Board members agree, however, that Israel's economy needs basic structural reform.
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The late [[Arthur Seldon]] who co-founded British free-market thinktank the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] was a member of the British friends of ICSEP along with the IEA's co-founder Lord [[Ralph Harris]] of High Cross. The US Board of Governors includes American neoconservative [[Irving Kristol]], while the UK board includes Sir [[Stanley Kalms]], ex-Treasurer of Conservative Party, and former director of the [[Centre for Policy Studies]], another British free-market think tank.
Bar-Ilan University
 
  
Prof. Tikva Darvis
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It claims to have had a significant impact on Israeli policy makers and the Israeli public's understanding of economics, moving it towards a free-market stance. ICSEP states:
Dr. Sarit Cohen-Goltner
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::When ICSEP began its work, market economics were either unknown, ignored or derided in this country. Today, as a result of ICSEP’s continuing efforts and the growing international momentum toward market economies, public opinion has dramatically changed.
Prof. Arieh Hillman
 
Prof. Yehoshua Lieberman
 
Prof. Yaffa Machnes
 
Prof. Shoshana Noiman
 
Prof. Yaacov Parush
 
Prof. Yaacov Rosenberg
 
Prof. Yohanan Schamurov
 
Prof. Jacques Silver
 
  
Ben-Gurion University
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::Israeli policy-makers no longer ask whether Israel should reduce government interference in the economy, rather, they ask where and at what speed, and how to overcome resistance to change.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/support/ Support: ICSEP's impact], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
  
Prof. Arie Avishur
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===Financial market reform===
Prof. Oded Hochman
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In 2004 ICSEP formed a working group led by the late Prof. [[Marshall Sarnat]], a leading Israeli banking expert, Prof. [[David Levhari]], [[Izhak Devash]] and [[David Boas]] that director [[Daniel Doron]] states 'formulated a capital market reform package and presented it to then Finance Minister [[Benjamin Netanyahu]]'. Netanhayu, reports Doron, 'immediately embraced it and delegated the director of his ministry, [[Yossie Bachar]] to implement it'. Doron states that there was 'powerful resistance' to the reform plan but it was ratified by the Knesset and he believes it created more competition that 'greatly improved the performance of [Israeli] capital markets'.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/speeches/opening-remarks-at-the-strategic-forums-sponsored-by-paul-merage Opening Remarks at the Strategic Forums Sponsored by Paul Merage], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
  
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On August 10 2005, Bachar wrote to Doron, whom he addressed as 'my dear friend Daniel', thanking him for his 'support and encouragement' and calling ICSEP an 'important ingredient' in the 'struggle' for reform.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/memos/finance-ministry-thanks-icsep Finance Ministry thanks ICSEP], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
Haifa University
 
  
Prof. Nahum Biger
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===Templeton Awards===
Prof. Moshe Kim
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Templeton Awards are given by the [[Atlas Economic Research Foundation]] to free market think tanks. ICSEP was winner of the 2005 Award for Institutional Excellence and the 2006 Templeton Award for Student Outreach.
Prof. Arieh Melnick
 
Prof. Steven Plaut
 
Prof. Avri Ravid
 
  
Hebrew University
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==Activities==
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===Economic analysis===
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====The problem according to ICSEP====
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ICSEP considers Israel to have a 'dysfunctional political and economic system' which it states causes high unemployment and low productivity. It also regards there to be 'a culture that resists' free-market reforms and believes this is because of 'a strong and politically well-connected oligarchy and media determined to perpetuate the monopoly-dominated system'.
  
Prof. Avi Ben-Bassat
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Among Israel's problems, according to ICSEP's analysis, are:
Prof. Menachem Brenner
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::oligopolistic businesses; militant labor unions; huge unaccountable government bureacracies; a strong leftist ethos with a belief in big governmentl high unemployment; low productivity; slow real wage growth; poverty remains widespread; the young flee; defence is underfunded.
Prof. Avraham Friedman
 
Prof. Dan Galai
 
Prof. Israel Gilad
 
Prof. Yoram Lanskroner
 
Prof. Yehushua Porat
 
Prof. Uriel Procaccia
 
Prof. Marhall Sarnat
 
Prof. Eytan Sheshinsky
 
  
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====ICSEP's solution====
Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center
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ICSEP’s says that its work has 'served as a major catalyst for reforms in the Israeli economy', citing examples which include:
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::financial market de-monopolization and deregulation; a major drive for privatization; banking sector reform; tax reform; the release of large tracts of government-owned land; deregulation of the building industry and break-up of building materials monopolies; simplification and abbreviation of construction and planning procedures; movement towards privatization of municipal services; substantial reduction of government interference in the agricultural sector; privatization of the immigrant absorption process<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/support/ Support: ICSEP's impact], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
  
Prof. Moshe Bar-Niv
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ICSEP's work aims to impact policy makers directly but is also targeted at the wider Israeli public, with the intention of creating a market-friendly political climate. It claims to be 'at the forefront of the struggle to educate Israelis and inspire them with market thinking'.
Prof. Uriel Reichman
 
The Technion
 
  
Prof. Benny Eden
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===Free market proselytising===
Prof. Uri Ben-Zion
 
Prof. Moshe Bental
 
Prof. Allan Kirshenbaum
 
  
Tel Aviv University
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====Policy makers====
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ICSEP carries out research on contemporary economic issues and has collaborated in the past with the [[International Center of Economic Growth]]  and the [[Koret Foundation]].<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/research Research Projects], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
  
Prof. Gideon Doron
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It also tries to influence policy makers in Israel by publishing reform proposals. It claims to have 'laid the groundwork for the successful anti-inflationary policies in the mid-eighties, and for the “privatized” immigrant absorption policies that facilitated the successful integration of the great mass of immigrants from the former Soviet Union'. It presented its work to the government of [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] in September 1999.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/plans Reform Plans], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
Prof. Zvi Eckstein
 
Prof. Dan Givoli
 
Prof. Avner Kalay
 
Prof. Shlomo Kalish
 
Prof. Emmanuel Marx
 
Prof. Assaf Razin
 
Prof. Ephraim Sadka
 
Prof. Itzhak Swari
 
  
Prof. Meir Tamari
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====Students====
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In the early 1990s, ICSEP received grants from [[George Soros]]’s [[Open Society Institute]] and gave workshops in Israeli high schools to '9,000 young immigrants from the former Soviet Union' which, the centre states, 'helped them integrate into a western-style economy'. In the mid-nineties, reportedly 'at the request of the Ministry of Education', ICSEP held what it describes as 'enrichment courses' for high school economics teachers to 'bring them up to date on new developments in the field'. Since 1998, ICSEP has held economics classes in several Israeli high schools in which it says more than 2,000 students have participated.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/courses High School Courses], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
  
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In universities, ICSEP is keen to preach its economic philosophy to students from all academic disciplines since it feels that many students are largely 'ignorant of economics and of market realities' which 'impairs their career decisions' and means they 'lack the tools to analyze government policies, or to ask what their costs effectiveness is' and so 'cannot act as enlightened citizens'.
  
Staff
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Since 2000, ICSEP has given its seminar ''The Free Market and its Critics '', based on ''Free to Choose'' by [[Milton Friedman]] and his wife Rose to almost 2,000 university students at the [[Hebrew University]], [[Tel Aviv University]] and [[Ben Gurion University]]. It seems the centre hopes these course will trigger 'the beginning of a true pro-reform grass roots movement that could have an immense impact', boasting that graduates have 'changed the atmosphere on the university campuses from outright hostility to market thinking to a great curiosity about, and increasing acceptance of classic liberal thought' and 'participate in promoting free markets ideas in the public arena outside campus'.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/seminars University Seminars], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
 
[[Daniel Doron]], Director
 
  
After serving in Air Force Intelligence during Israel's War of Independence and studying Sociology and Economics at the Hebrew University, Doron pursued a career in literature, journalism and government (under Teddy Kollek, then director-general of the Prime Minister's Office). Doron was delegated by the Prime Minister's Office to serve as Special Consultant to the US Embassy in Tel Aviv.
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An article written by Doron for the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] reveals the deeply ideological character of such work. He states that ICSEP is 'at the forefront of the struggle to overcome the pro-Marxist education that dominates most of our universities by inspiring Israeli students through pro-market thinking.'<ref>[http://www.iea.org.uk/sites/default/files/publications/files/upldbook436pdf.pdf Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.107], Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
  
He subsequently resumed his studies as a Fellow of the University of Chicago's Committee on Social Thought, and then with Lionel Trilling and Jacques Barzun as a Visiting Scholar at Columbia University. Since 1973, Doron has been involved in political and economic reform in Israel, helping to found the Shinui (Change) Party.
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====Israeli public====
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ICSEP has stated that it is engaged in a struggle to 're-educate' Israelis and 'inspire them with market thinking prevalent in the West'.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/about/mission About - Mission], ICSEP, accessed 10 August 2012</ref>
  
Doron was sole representative of the internationally-renowned artist Shalom of Safed, arranging his 15 museum exhibitions. Doron's film on Shalom won several awards and represented the US in international festivals.
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The centre has translated free market texts such as ''Free to Choose'' by [[Milton Friedman]] and [[Rose Friedman]] into Hebrew. According to ICSEP's website it is currently producing a book about the reform of the financial market initiated by then Finance Minister [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] and is also working on a TV series.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/books Books & Translations], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref> Doron has also stated in an article for the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]]: 'Thanks to ICSEP’s sponsorship, Israeli television has twice broadcast Milton Friedman’s  Free to Choose with Hebrew subtitles, a special on the difficulties of free markets in Israel and a film on immigrant entrepreneurship'.<ref>[http://www.iea.org.uk/sites/default/files/publications/files/upldbook436pdf.pdf Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.111-112], Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
  
Since 1983, Doron has devoted all his time to ICSEP. He served on an economic advisory group for Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and on the Israel Government Council for National and Economic Planning, is a member of the Board of the Entrepreneurial Center of Tel Aviv University, and a member of the Mont-Pelerin Society. He has published articles in The Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, The New Republic, The Weekly Standard and Reason as well as in other US publications and in the Israeli press. He is a regular columnist for The Jerusalem Post.
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The centre also translates into Hebrew articles from publications that share its economic analysis - such as [[Commentary]], The Wall Street Journal, The Weekly Standard and others - in order to 'expose Israeli readers to a wider range of thinkers and ideas than is available in the mostly one-sided Israeli media' via its website ''Kivunim''. Among others, it has carried articles by well known neoliberals and neoconservatives:
  
Research
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[[Francis Fukuyama]] | [[Samuel Huntington]] | [[Alan Dershowitz]] | [[Charles Krauthammer]] | [[Martin Wolf]] | [[Hernando de Soto]] | [[Irving Kristol]] | [[Mortimer Zuckerman]]<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/periodicals Kivunim website], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
  
ICSEP's Director of Research is Hebrew University Professor of Economics David Levhari, former President of the Falk Economic Research Institute and an economist of international renown.
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===Events===
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====Attendance at Herzliya Conference====
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Director [[Daniel Doron]] has spoken twice at the Herzliya Conference, the major annual gathering of military and political figures in Israel.
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*At the [[Sixth Herzliya Conference]] he was part of a panel discussing 'Social Policy and Economic Growth' on 24 January 2006<ref>[http://www.herzliyaconference.org/eng/?CategoryID=215&ArticleID=1542 Program], The 6th Conference, herzliyaconference.org, accessed 6 June 2012.</ref>
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*At the [[Twelfth Herzliya Conference]] Doron spoke on the topic 'Governing Israel's Economy: Social Justice vs. Capitalism' on 1 February 2012<ref>[http://www.herzliyaconference.org/eng/?CategoryID=465 The Twelfth Annual Herzliya Conference], herzliyaconference.org, accessed 1 June 2012.</ref>
  
Administration
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====Conference on the Balance of National Strength and Security====
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On 25 May 2004 a two and a half day conference attended by 'over 500 people from the highest echelons of the military and the defense establishments' was held at the Center for Policy and Strategy at the [[Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center]]’s Lauder School of Government. Over ten sessions participants discussed 'how critical economic growth is to national strength'. ICSEP helped 'initiate and implement the conference' and organised two panels; one on 'Economics & National Strength', the other on 'Technology & National Strength'.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/activities/strength_and_security Conference on the Balance of National Strength and Security], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
  
ICSEP has a small core administrative staff and hires outside expert help for each of its projects, thereby cutting costs and achieving operational flexibility and quality.
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===Hosting 'leading personalities' in Israel===
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The organisation has brought a number of high profile figures - mostly American and British and number of them 'friends' of ICSEP - to Israel to 'share their knowledge and experiences'. They include:
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*Nobel laureate Professor [[Milton Friedman]], the intellectual father of modern neoliberalism
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*Professor [[Irving Kristol]], an early neoconservative and father of [[William Kristol]]
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*Ambassador [[Stuart Eizenstat]], US Supreme Court
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*Justice [[Antonin Scalia]]
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*Judge [[Richard Posner]]
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*[[George Melloan]] of the Wall Street Journal
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*Sir [[Leon Brittan]], former UK Commissioner for the Common Market
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*[[Samuel Zell]], businessman
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*Lord [[Stanley Kalms]]
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*[[David Young|Lord Young]] of Gaffham (David)<ref>[http://www.iea.org.uk/sites/default/files/publications/files/upldbook436pdf.pdf Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.111], Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
  
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===Speeches===
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====Prosperity will bring peace====
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[[Daniel Doron]], ICSEP's director, gave a speech sponsored by the [[America-Israel Friendship League]] entitled '[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/speeches/israels-prosperity-peace-depend-on-economic-reform Israel’s Prosperity, Peace Depend on Economic Reform]' in 2009. He argued that 'free and prosperous markets provide the most powerful incentive for peace, not just paper peace signed by politicians but a real peace between people who recognize the benefits of peace'. He claimed that '[a]rrangements that only reflect political considerations often fail to address the real needs of people or dissipate their animosity' and later stated '[e]conomic growth demands cooperation. It makes former differences seem irrelevant, or at least less important'. He went on to say:
  
Friends
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<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">Before the 1993 Oslo agreement was signed between a deluded Israeli leadership and Arafat’s terrorist PLO, a most promising though non-political process of economic collaboration led to a gradual reconciliation between Arabs and Jews. From Israel’s 1967 conquest of the disputed territories to the 1987 Intifada, Israel followed a laissez faire policy. It maintained open bridges with Jordan and did not interfere in the Palestinian Arabs’ internal affairs. Israel’s maintenance of a modicum of law and order in the disputed territories of the West Bank and Gaza facilitated the development of trade and rapid economic growth. Crowds of Israelis ate and shopped on weekends in Arab towns and markets. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinian workers, freed from backbreaking drudgery on primitive Arab farms by Israeli-introduced modern farming techniques, moved from a bare subsistence in the backward Palestinian economy to far more lucrative jobs in the growing Israeli economy.
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<br>
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<br>
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The outcome was dramatic. The GDP of the Palestinians more than quadrupled. Education levels rose, and some seven universities were established where none existed before.So did health levels, especially of women and children. The population grew rapidly. There were remarkably few terrorist attacks during this period. The few that happened were mostly perpetrated by PLO hirelings and did not enjoy popular support. Not that the Arabs were enamored of Israeli occupation. No one likes an occupation. But they found the occupation a lesser evil to Arab rule, realizing the enormous benefits it brought to them (this was even truer after Oslo when Palestinians learned first hand what PLO rule meant, so when it was rumored that Arab sections of Jerusalem were to be ceded to the Authority real estate prices plummeted).<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/speeches/israels-prosperity-peace-depend-on-economic-reform Israel’s Prosperity, Peace Depend on Economic Reform], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref></blockquote>
  
US Board of Governors
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Besides the characterisation of Palestinian agriculture as 'primitive' and the economy as 'backward', and the description of the occupied territories as 'disputed territories', the assertion that the occupation brought benefits to Palestinians to the extent that they regarded Israeli rule as preferable to rule by the Palestinian Liberation Organisation is highly debatable and completely unsupported by evidence. Furthermore Doron wholly ignores the underlying political causes of the conflict, the international laws Israel persistently breaches and the human rights abuses it commits.
Richard Fox, Chairman
 
Prof. Irving Kristol, Chairman Emeritus
 
Kenneth Abramowitz, Bernard Groveman, Edward Minor, Vice Chairmen
 
Milton J. Schubin, Secretary
 
Daniel Doron, Director
 
  
c/o Fox Enterprises
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His additional claims are equally incredible:
955 Chesterbrook Road, Suite 125
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*that the 'economic revolution' had 'far-reaching social consequences' and 'Arab women were great beneficiaries', implying that the occupation advanced women's rights
Wayne, PA 19087-5615
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*that 'because thriving tourism and commerce made most East Jerusalem Arabs very prosperous, 99% of them opted for Israeli rather than Palestinian papers' after Oslo 'because, while intensely disliking Israeli occupation, they were even less enamored of Palestinian misrule, terrorism and economic extortion' - ignoring the fact that many Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem felt it was the only safeguard against the Israeli authorities forcibly displacing them from the city<ref>Riman Barakat, [http://972mag.com/quietly-east-jerusalem-palestinians-are-becoming-israeli-citizens/46298/ Quietly, East Jerusalem Palestinians acquiring Israeli citizenship], +972.mag, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
+1 (610) 640-1400
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*that the Palestinian Authority's 'rule of terror suppressed economic activity and resulted in massive unemployment, reaching in some areas 60%', and only acknowledging Israel's role to the extent that 'bureaucracy made a dependent Arab population miserable with it arbitrary and oppressive strictures'
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*that the 'so-called Arab street' is 'prey to radicalism and violence' because 'a UN established welfare regime has rewarded pregnant and nursing mothers, and thus increased the birth rate' creating a population that is mostly youngsters who are 'unemployable and shiftless' and 'prey to agitators'. This argument is similar to the one propounded by [[Martin Kramer]], though Doron advocates economic growth as a means to alter this supposedly harmful demographic balance, where Kramer controversially suggested ending what he called 'pro-natal subsidies'<ref>[http://electronicintifada.net/content/harvard-fellow-calls-genocidal-measure-curb-palestinian-births/8692 Harvard Fellow calls for genocidal measure to curb Palestinian births], Electronic Intifada, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>. Both, however, ignore crucial political grievances as a factor in radicalisation.
  
ICSEP's Friends organization in the US is chaired by Richard Fox, Chairman of the Board of Temple University and a leading developer and major figure in American-Jewish politics.
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====Other speeches====
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*Doron also addressed the [[Republican Jewish Coalition]] in May 2005 in Washington, D.C.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/speeches/israels-survival-peace-depend-on-economic-prosperity Israel’s survival, peace, depend on economic prosperity], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
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*At an event in June 2007 called the Strategic Forums, sponsored by [[Paul Merage]], Doron poured scorn on calls policies that prioritise reducing income disparities over growth, asking 'Can anyone explain why a rising tide must float all boats equally or whether it can really do so when different sized boats—to stick to the metaphor—will naturally be affected differently by a rising tide?' He derided what he called 'fashionable talk' of social responsibility and social justice, railed against 'redistributive fantasies', claiming 'it is almost impossible to define what equality really is'.<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/speeches/opening-remarks-at-the-strategic-forums-sponsored-by-paul-merage Opening Remarks at the Strategic Forums Sponsored by Paul Merage], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
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*In April 2008 at a [[National Center for Policy Analysis]] dinner in in Dallas, Texas, Doron introduced [[Benjamin Netanyahu]], calling him 'a courageous, determined prime minister' for initiating free market reforms in Israel in 1996<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/programs/speeches/opening-remarks-to-introduce-binyamin-netanyahu Opening Remarks to Introduce Binyamin Netanyahu], ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
  
ICSEP's US Board includes such distinguished scholars as Professors Irving Kristol and the late Herbert Stein; and prominent Jewish leaders, including two former National Chairmen of the United Jewish Appeal.
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==People==
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===Staff===
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ICSEP has a small core administrative staff and hires outside expert help for each of its projects, 'thereby cutting costs and achieving operational flexibility and quality'.
  
Howard Berkowitz
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*[[Daniel Doron]]: Founder and director - formerly an Israeli intelligence officer, economic adviser to Prime Minster [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] and Special Consultant to the US Embassy in Tel Aviv
Midge Decter
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*[[David Levhari]]: Director of Research - Hebrew University Professor of Economics and former President of the [[Falk Economic Research Institute]].
Eugene M. Grant
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*[[Ben-Zion Levy]]: Editor of ''Kivunim'', ICSEP's online magazine - former director of the [[Aliya Center]] for the southwestern United States
Alexander Grass
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:Dr. [[Gabriel Ben-Ami]]: Policy Programming Consultant | [[Lavie Seigmann]]: Director of University Programming & IT and Internet projects | [[Yosi Ganel]]: Course Coordinator, Tel Aviv University and Sapir College; Programming and Assistant Director, The Center for Choice in Education | [[Yossi Tamar]]: Policy Programming Consultant. Also manages the Constitution Project at the [[Shalem Center]] | [[Iri Rikin]]: Media Relations<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/organization/ Organization: Staff], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
Roger Hertog
 
Robert Israeloff
 
 
Morris M. Kaplan
 
Curtis Katz
 
Leslie Lenkowsky
 
Prof. Henry G. Manne
 
Prof. David Meiselman
 
Arthur Powell
 
Stephen Shalom
 
 
Prof. David Sidorsky
 
Prof. S. Fred Singer
 
Judge Abraham Sofaer
 
James S. Tisch
 
David Wachs
 
Alan Wurtzel
 
  
UK Board of Governors
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===Board of Advisors===
David Lewis, CBE, FCA, President
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ICSEP has an Israeli Board of Advisors comprised of 'over forty of the country's most distinguished economists, jurists and social scientists'. ICSEP states that it is 'completely non-partisan, its board members representing all Israel's universities and a broad spectrum of opinions'. All Board members agree, however, that Israel's economy 'needs basic structural reform'. In 2012 they were listed as:<ref>[http://icsep.org.il/en/organization/ Organisation - Advisors & Friends], ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012</ref>
Lord Stanley Kalms, Vice-President
 
Patrons: Lord Harris of High Cross, Lord Young of Graffham
 
Founder: The Late Sir Emmanuel Kaye
 
President Emeritus: Sir Ronald Cohen
 
  
c/o David Lewis
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*'''Public Board''': [[David Alexander]] | [[Eli Ayalon]] | [[David Boas]] | [[Isaac Dvash]] | [[Yossi Hollander]]
Chelsea House
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*'''Bar-Ilan University''': Dr. [[Sarit Cohen-Goltner]] | Prof. [[Arieh Hillman]] | Prof. [[Yehoshua Lieberman]] | Prof. [[Yaffa Machnes]] | Prof. [[Shoshana Noima]]n | Prof. [[Yaacov Parush]] | Prof. [[Yaacov Rosenberg]] |
Westgate, Hanger Lane
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*'''[[Ben-Gurion University]]''': Prof. [[Oded Hochman]]
Londond W51DR
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*'''Haifa University''': Prof. [[Nahum Biger]] | Prof. [[Moshe Kim]] | Prof. [[Arieh Melnick]] | Prof. [[Steven Plaut]]
+44 (208) 998-8822
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*'''Hebrew University''': Prof. [[Avi Ben-Bassat]] | Prof. [[Menachem Brenner]] | Prof. [[Avraham Friedman]] | Prof. [[Dan Galai]] | Prof. [[Israel Gilad]] | Prof. [[Yoram Lanskroner]] | Prof. [[Yehushua Porat]] | Prof. [Uriel Procaccia]] | Prof. [[Eytan Sheshinsky]]
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*'''[[Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center]]''': Prof. [[Moshe Bar-Niv]] | Prof. [[Uriel Reichman]]
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*'''The Technion''': Prof. [[Benny Eden]] | Prof. [[Uri Ben-Zion]] | Prof. [[Moshe Bental]]
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*'''[[Tel Aviv University]]''': Prof. [[Gideon Doron]] | Prof. [[Zvi Eckstein]] | Prof. [[Dan Givoli]] | Prof. [[Avner Kalay]] | Prof. [[Shlomo Kalish]] | Prof. [[Emmanuel Marx]] | Prof. [[Assaf Razin]] | Prof. [[Ephraim Sadka]] | Prof. [[Itzhak Swari]] | Prof. [[Joseph Gross]] | Prof. [[Meir Tamari]] former Chief Economist, Bank of Israel | Prof. Nava Haruvy, Netanya Academic College
  
ICSEP's British Friends:
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=====Former Board Members=====
Sir David Alliance
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Prof. [[Tikva Darvis]] | Prof. [[Yohanan Schamurov]] | Prof. [[Jacques Silver]] | Prof. [[Arie Avishur]] | Prof. [[Avri Ravid]] | Prof. [[Allan Kirshenbaum]] | Prof. [[Marhall Sarnat]]
Stephen Barclay
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Stanley Cohen
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===Friends===
Ivor Connick
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Walter Goldsmith
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====US Board of Governors====
+
ICSEP's US Board includes [[Irving Kristol]] and prominent Jewish leaders, including two former National Chairmen of the [[United Jewish Appeal]]. In 2012 they were listed as:
Maurice Hatter
+
 
Sir Anthony Jacobs
+
:[[Richard Fox]] - Chairman | Prof. [[Irving Kristol]], Chairman Emeritus | [[Kenneth Abramowitz]] - Vice Chairman | [[Edward Minor]] - Vice Chairman | [[Milton J. Schubin]] - Secretary | [[Daniel Doron]] - Director <ref>'Organization', [http://www.icsep.org.il/en/about/organization ICSEP website]</ref>
Sir Geoffrey Leigh
+
 
Conrad Morris
+
Registered address: c/o Fox Enterprises, 955 Chesterbrook Road, Suite 125, Wayne, PA 19087-5615, +1 (610) 640-1400
Sir Leslie Porter
+
 
Gerald Ronson
+
====American Friends====
+
ICSEP's Friends organization in the US is chaired by [[Richard Fox]], Chairman of the Board of Temple University, a leading developer and a major figure in American-Jewish politics. In 2012 they were listed as:
Arthur Seldon
+
 
Sir Sigmund Sternberg
+
:[[Howard Berkowitz]] | [[Midge Decter]] | [[Eugene M. Grant]] | [[Roger Hertog]] | [[Robert Israeloff]] | [[Morris M. Kaplan]] | [[Curtis Katz]] | [[Leslie Lenkowsky]] | Prof. [[Henry G. Manne]] | Prof. [[David Meiselman]] | Prof. [[David Sidorsky]] | Prof. [[S. Fred Singer]] | Judge [[Abraham Sofaer]]
Monty Sumray
+
 
Barry Townsley
+
====UK Board of Governors====
Fred Worms
+
:[[David Lewis]] - CBE, FCA, President | Lord [[Stanley Kalms]] - Vice-President | [[David Young|Lord Young]] of Graffham - Patron | The late Sir [[Emmanuel Kaye]] - founder |  Sir [[Ronald Cohen]] - President Emeritus
 +
 
 +
Registered address: c/o David Lewis, Chelsea House, Westgate, Hanger Lane, London, W51DR, +44 (208) 998-8822
 +
 
 +
====British Friends====
 +
:Sir [[David Alliance]] | [[Stephen Barclay]] | [[Stanley Cohen]] | [[Ivor Connick]] | [[Walter Goldsmith]] | [[Maurice Hatter]] | Sir [[Anthony Jacobs]] | Sir [[Geoffrey Leigh]] | [[Conrad Morris]] | [[Gerald Ronson]] | [[Arthur Seldon]] | Sir [[Sigmund Sternberg]] | [[Monty Sumray]] | [[Barry Townsley]] | [[Fred Worms]] <ref>'Organization', [http://www.icsep.org.il/en/about/organization ICSEP website]</ref>
 +
 
 +
=====Former=====
 +
:[[Bernard Groveman]] - former Vice Chairman, US Board of Governors | [[Alexander Grass]] - former American Friend | [[Arthur Powell]]  - former American Friend | [[Stephen Shalom]] - former American Friend | James [[S. Tisch]] - former American Friend | [[David Wachs]] - former American Friend | [[Alan Wurtzel]] - former American Friend | [[Ralph Harris|Lord Harris]] of High Cross - former patron, UK Board of Governors | [[Arthur Seldon]] - former British friend | Sir [[Leslie Porter]] - former British friend
 +
 
 +
==Funding==
 +
ICSEP's website states that it is a registered charity in the USA under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (Tax ID # 13-3129249). The centre does not reveal any information about the identity of its major funders. Its annual required budget in 2003, according to archived webpages, was $690,000, broken down as follows:
 +
 
 +
:High school economic education program $125,000
 +
:University seminars                 $165,000
 +
:“Kivunim” website                 $250,000
 +
:Policy work and administration         $150,000
 +
:Annual Total                         $690,000<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20081204111046/http://www.icsep.org.il/en/memos/workplan_2002_3 Work Plan 2002-3 - Internet Archive capture 4 December 2008], ICSEP via Internet Archive, accessed 10 August 2012</ref>
 +
 
 +
These archived pages also reveal that the center formerly employed director [[Daniel Doron]]'s wife Susan Doron to assist with 'all foreign-related work, with media work and with fundraising.'<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20081204111046/http://www.icsep.org.il/en/memos/workplan_2002_3 Work Plan 2002-3 - Internet Archive capture 4 December 2008], ICSEP via Internet Archive, accessed 10 August 2012</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Lewis Family Charitable Trust===
 +
The [[Lewis Family Charitable Trust]] (registered charity number 259892) has allowed the President of ICSEP's UK board of governors, [[David Lewis]], to channel tax-deductible donations to ICSEP, as blogger Tony Greenstein points out<ref>[http://azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2010/04/lewis-trust-group-its-donations-to.html The Lewis Trust Group, its donations to Conservative constituency parties, Think Tanks and Palestinian Media Watch], Tony Greenstein's Blog, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>.
 +
 
 +
It gave the following amounts to ICSEP:
 +
:2007: £9,568<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_AC_20070531_E_C.PDF  Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2007], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>
 +
:2008: £20,017<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_AC_20080531_E_C.PDF Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2008], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>
 +
:2009: £25,552<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_AC_20090531_E_C.PDF Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2009], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>
 +
:2010: £26,836<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_AC_20100531_E_C.PDF Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2010], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>
 +
:2011: £52,403<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_ac_20110531_e_c.pdf Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2011], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>
 +
 
 +
Greenstein also records that the 2004 report listed a donation of £14,276 and the 2005 report a donation of £9,342.<ref>[http://azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2010/04/lewis-trust-group-its-donations-to.html The Lewis Trust Group, its donations to Conservative constituency parties, Think Tanks and Palestinian Media Watch], Tony Greenstein's Blog, accessed 13 August 2012</ref> In addition in 2007 the Lewis Family Charitable Trust also gave £9,568<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_AC_20070531_E_C.PDF  Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2007], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref> and the following year £39,521<ref>[http://www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends92/0000259892_AC_20080531_E_C.PDF Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2008], Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012</ref> to  a group called [[Citizens for True Social Justice]], which was set up by alumni of ICSEP's free market university course.<ref>Daniel Doron, [http://atlasnetwork.org/public_html/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Freedom%20Champions%20Chapter%2027%20Full.pdf Freedom Champions - Stories from the Front Line in the War of Ideas p.239], atlasnetwork.org, accessed 13 August 2012</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Publications==
 +
ICSEP at one stage published a Hebrew-language periodical called ''Lihiyot Hofshi'' (‘To Be Free’), which contained economic commentary, analysis and information on the Israeli economy.
 +
 
 +
According to Doron, it has also published 'numerous papers in Hebrew, covering topics such as Britain’s pioneering privatisation experience, deregulation' and 'the benefits of privatisation for the environment'.<ref>[http://www.iea.org.uk/sites/default/files/publications/files/upldbook436pdf.pdf Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.110], Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Contact==
 +
Address:
 +
:59 Hadror St.
 +
:PO Box 84124
 +
:Mevasseret Zion 90805
 +
Phone:
 +
:+972 (2) 534-6463
 +
:+972 (2) 533-0122 fax
 +
Email:
 +
:mail@icsep.org.il
 +
Website:
 +
:http://icsep.org.il
 +
 
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
 +
[[Category:Think Tanks]]
 +
[[Category:Middle East Watch]][[Category:Israel Lobby]][[Category:Israel]][[Category:Israeli Think Tanks]]

Latest revision as of 07:54, 9 August 2013

The Israel Center for Social and Economic Progress (ICSEP) is "an independent pro-market public policy think tank" set up in 1984[1] and it has a number of board members connected to neoconservative causes and free market fundamentalism.

It claims that its work 'facilitates crucial economic reforms and helps overcome resistance to them'. It considers Israel to be 'plagued by painful social, economic and political problems rooted in its socialist-statist system' and states that its mission is 'to help Israel realize its enormous potential by freeing its economy from the shackles of this regressive system'.[2] Its motto is 'Where there is no bread, there is no Torah.'

ICSEP has been praised by Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Shimon Peres, former Deputy Prime Minister of Industry and Trade Natan Sharansky and by Milton Friedman, widely considered to be the father of free-market economics. Friedman said:

ICSEP is like a breath of fresh air… It deserves the support of all of us who are deeply committed to the survival of a strong and healthy Israel.[3]

The centre was founded by former Israeli intelligence officer Daniel Doron who remains ICSEP's director.

History

ICSEP says that since its inception it has 'led the effort in creating a consensus for economic liberalization and deregulation'. Its right wing credentials have been clear from the start and are evidenced by the personnel involved in the organisation.

The late Arthur Seldon who co-founded British free-market thinktank the Institute of Economic Affairs was a member of the British friends of ICSEP along with the IEA's co-founder Lord Ralph Harris of High Cross. The US Board of Governors includes American neoconservative Irving Kristol, while the UK board includes Sir Stanley Kalms, ex-Treasurer of Conservative Party, and former director of the Centre for Policy Studies, another British free-market think tank.

It claims to have had a significant impact on Israeli policy makers and the Israeli public's understanding of economics, moving it towards a free-market stance. ICSEP states:

When ICSEP began its work, market economics were either unknown, ignored or derided in this country. Today, as a result of ICSEP’s continuing efforts and the growing international momentum toward market economies, public opinion has dramatically changed.
Israeli policy-makers no longer ask whether Israel should reduce government interference in the economy, rather, they ask where and at what speed, and how to overcome resistance to change.[4]

Financial market reform

In 2004 ICSEP formed a working group led by the late Prof. Marshall Sarnat, a leading Israeli banking expert, Prof. David Levhari, Izhak Devash and David Boas that director Daniel Doron states 'formulated a capital market reform package and presented it to then Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu'. Netanhayu, reports Doron, 'immediately embraced it and delegated the director of his ministry, Yossie Bachar to implement it'. Doron states that there was 'powerful resistance' to the reform plan but it was ratified by the Knesset and he believes it created more competition that 'greatly improved the performance of [Israeli] capital markets'.[5]

On August 10 2005, Bachar wrote to Doron, whom he addressed as 'my dear friend Daniel', thanking him for his 'support and encouragement' and calling ICSEP an 'important ingredient' in the 'struggle' for reform.[6]

Templeton Awards

Templeton Awards are given by the Atlas Economic Research Foundation to free market think tanks. ICSEP was winner of the 2005 Award for Institutional Excellence and the 2006 Templeton Award for Student Outreach.

Activities

Economic analysis

The problem according to ICSEP

ICSEP considers Israel to have a 'dysfunctional political and economic system' which it states causes high unemployment and low productivity. It also regards there to be 'a culture that resists' free-market reforms and believes this is because of 'a strong and politically well-connected oligarchy and media determined to perpetuate the monopoly-dominated system'.

Among Israel's problems, according to ICSEP's analysis, are:

oligopolistic businesses; militant labor unions; huge unaccountable government bureacracies; a strong leftist ethos with a belief in big governmentl high unemployment; low productivity; slow real wage growth; poverty remains widespread; the young flee; defence is underfunded.

ICSEP's solution

ICSEP’s says that its work has 'served as a major catalyst for reforms in the Israeli economy', citing examples which include:

financial market de-monopolization and deregulation; a major drive for privatization; banking sector reform; tax reform; the release of large tracts of government-owned land; deregulation of the building industry and break-up of building materials monopolies; simplification and abbreviation of construction and planning procedures; movement towards privatization of municipal services; substantial reduction of government interference in the agricultural sector; privatization of the immigrant absorption process[7]

ICSEP's work aims to impact policy makers directly but is also targeted at the wider Israeli public, with the intention of creating a market-friendly political climate. It claims to be 'at the forefront of the struggle to educate Israelis and inspire them with market thinking'.

Free market proselytising

Policy makers

ICSEP carries out research on contemporary economic issues and has collaborated in the past with the International Center of Economic Growth and the Koret Foundation.[8]

It also tries to influence policy makers in Israel by publishing reform proposals. It claims to have 'laid the groundwork for the successful anti-inflationary policies in the mid-eighties, and for the “privatized” immigrant absorption policies that facilitated the successful integration of the great mass of immigrants from the former Soviet Union'. It presented its work to the government of Benjamin Netanyahu in September 1999.[9]

Students

In the early 1990s, ICSEP received grants from George Soros’s Open Society Institute and gave workshops in Israeli high schools to '9,000 young immigrants from the former Soviet Union' which, the centre states, 'helped them integrate into a western-style economy'. In the mid-nineties, reportedly 'at the request of the Ministry of Education', ICSEP held what it describes as 'enrichment courses' for high school economics teachers to 'bring them up to date on new developments in the field'. Since 1998, ICSEP has held economics classes in several Israeli high schools in which it says more than 2,000 students have participated.[10]

In universities, ICSEP is keen to preach its economic philosophy to students from all academic disciplines since it feels that many students are largely 'ignorant of economics and of market realities' which 'impairs their career decisions' and means they 'lack the tools to analyze government policies, or to ask what their costs effectiveness is' and so 'cannot act as enlightened citizens'.

Since 2000, ICSEP has given its seminar The Free Market and its Critics , based on Free to Choose by Milton Friedman and his wife Rose to almost 2,000 university students at the Hebrew University, Tel Aviv University and Ben Gurion University. It seems the centre hopes these course will trigger 'the beginning of a true pro-reform grass roots movement that could have an immense impact', boasting that graduates have 'changed the atmosphere on the university campuses from outright hostility to market thinking to a great curiosity about, and increasing acceptance of classic liberal thought' and 'participate in promoting free markets ideas in the public arena outside campus'.[11]

An article written by Doron for the Institute of Economic Affairs reveals the deeply ideological character of such work. He states that ICSEP is 'at the forefront of the struggle to overcome the pro-Marxist education that dominates most of our universities by inspiring Israeli students through pro-market thinking.'[12]

Israeli public

ICSEP has stated that it is engaged in a struggle to 're-educate' Israelis and 'inspire them with market thinking prevalent in the West'.[13]

The centre has translated free market texts such as Free to Choose by Milton Friedman and Rose Friedman into Hebrew. According to ICSEP's website it is currently producing a book about the reform of the financial market initiated by then Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and is also working on a TV series.[14] Doron has also stated in an article for the Institute of Economic Affairs: 'Thanks to ICSEP’s sponsorship, Israeli television has twice broadcast Milton Friedman’s Free to Choose with Hebrew subtitles, a special on the difficulties of free markets in Israel and a film on immigrant entrepreneurship'.[15]

The centre also translates into Hebrew articles from publications that share its economic analysis - such as Commentary, The Wall Street Journal, The Weekly Standard and others - in order to 'expose Israeli readers to a wider range of thinkers and ideas than is available in the mostly one-sided Israeli media' via its website Kivunim. Among others, it has carried articles by well known neoliberals and neoconservatives:

Francis Fukuyama | Samuel Huntington | Alan Dershowitz | Charles Krauthammer | Martin Wolf | Hernando de Soto | Irving Kristol | Mortimer Zuckerman[16]

Events

Attendance at Herzliya Conference

Director Daniel Doron has spoken twice at the Herzliya Conference, the major annual gathering of military and political figures in Israel.

Conference on the Balance of National Strength and Security

On 25 May 2004 a two and a half day conference attended by 'over 500 people from the highest echelons of the military and the defense establishments' was held at the Center for Policy and Strategy at the Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center’s Lauder School of Government. Over ten sessions participants discussed 'how critical economic growth is to national strength'. ICSEP helped 'initiate and implement the conference' and organised two panels; one on 'Economics & National Strength', the other on 'Technology & National Strength'.[19]

Hosting 'leading personalities' in Israel

The organisation has brought a number of high profile figures - mostly American and British and number of them 'friends' of ICSEP - to Israel to 'share their knowledge and experiences'. They include:

Speeches

Prosperity will bring peace

Daniel Doron, ICSEP's director, gave a speech sponsored by the America-Israel Friendship League entitled 'Israel’s Prosperity, Peace Depend on Economic Reform' in 2009. He argued that 'free and prosperous markets provide the most powerful incentive for peace, not just paper peace signed by politicians but a real peace between people who recognize the benefits of peace'. He claimed that '[a]rrangements that only reflect political considerations often fail to address the real needs of people or dissipate their animosity' and later stated '[e]conomic growth demands cooperation. It makes former differences seem irrelevant, or at least less important'. He went on to say:

Before the 1993 Oslo agreement was signed between a deluded Israeli leadership and Arafat’s terrorist PLO, a most promising though non-political process of economic collaboration led to a gradual reconciliation between Arabs and Jews. From Israel’s 1967 conquest of the disputed territories to the 1987 Intifada, Israel followed a laissez faire policy. It maintained open bridges with Jordan and did not interfere in the Palestinian Arabs’ internal affairs. Israel’s maintenance of a modicum of law and order in the disputed territories of the West Bank and Gaza facilitated the development of trade and rapid economic growth. Crowds of Israelis ate and shopped on weekends in Arab towns and markets. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinian workers, freed from backbreaking drudgery on primitive Arab farms by Israeli-introduced modern farming techniques, moved from a bare subsistence in the backward Palestinian economy to far more lucrative jobs in the growing Israeli economy.



The outcome was dramatic. The GDP of the Palestinians more than quadrupled. Education levels rose, and some seven universities were established where none existed before.So did health levels, especially of women and children. The population grew rapidly. There were remarkably few terrorist attacks during this period. The few that happened were mostly perpetrated by PLO hirelings and did not enjoy popular support. Not that the Arabs were enamored of Israeli occupation. No one likes an occupation. But they found the occupation a lesser evil to Arab rule, realizing the enormous benefits it brought to them (this was even truer after Oslo when Palestinians learned first hand what PLO rule meant, so when it was rumored that Arab sections of Jerusalem were to be ceded to the Authority real estate prices plummeted).[21]

Besides the characterisation of Palestinian agriculture as 'primitive' and the economy as 'backward', and the description of the occupied territories as 'disputed territories', the assertion that the occupation brought benefits to Palestinians to the extent that they regarded Israeli rule as preferable to rule by the Palestinian Liberation Organisation is highly debatable and completely unsupported by evidence. Furthermore Doron wholly ignores the underlying political causes of the conflict, the international laws Israel persistently breaches and the human rights abuses it commits.

His additional claims are equally incredible:

  • that the 'economic revolution' had 'far-reaching social consequences' and 'Arab women were great beneficiaries', implying that the occupation advanced women's rights
  • that 'because thriving tourism and commerce made most East Jerusalem Arabs very prosperous, 99% of them opted for Israeli rather than Palestinian papers' after Oslo 'because, while intensely disliking Israeli occupation, they were even less enamored of Palestinian misrule, terrorism and economic extortion' - ignoring the fact that many Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem felt it was the only safeguard against the Israeli authorities forcibly displacing them from the city[22]
  • that the Palestinian Authority's 'rule of terror suppressed economic activity and resulted in massive unemployment, reaching in some areas 60%', and only acknowledging Israel's role to the extent that 'bureaucracy made a dependent Arab population miserable with it arbitrary and oppressive strictures'
  • that the 'so-called Arab street' is 'prey to radicalism and violence' because 'a UN established welfare regime has rewarded pregnant and nursing mothers, and thus increased the birth rate' creating a population that is mostly youngsters who are 'unemployable and shiftless' and 'prey to agitators'. This argument is similar to the one propounded by Martin Kramer, though Doron advocates economic growth as a means to alter this supposedly harmful demographic balance, where Kramer controversially suggested ending what he called 'pro-natal subsidies'[23]. Both, however, ignore crucial political grievances as a factor in radicalisation.

Other speeches

  • Doron also addressed the Republican Jewish Coalition in May 2005 in Washington, D.C.[24]
  • At an event in June 2007 called the Strategic Forums, sponsored by Paul Merage, Doron poured scorn on calls policies that prioritise reducing income disparities over growth, asking 'Can anyone explain why a rising tide must float all boats equally or whether it can really do so when different sized boats—to stick to the metaphor—will naturally be affected differently by a rising tide?' He derided what he called 'fashionable talk' of social responsibility and social justice, railed against 'redistributive fantasies', claiming 'it is almost impossible to define what equality really is'.[25]
  • In April 2008 at a National Center for Policy Analysis dinner in in Dallas, Texas, Doron introduced Benjamin Netanyahu, calling him 'a courageous, determined prime minister' for initiating free market reforms in Israel in 1996[26]

People

Staff

ICSEP has a small core administrative staff and hires outside expert help for each of its projects, 'thereby cutting costs and achieving operational flexibility and quality'.

Dr. Gabriel Ben-Ami: Policy Programming Consultant | Lavie Seigmann: Director of University Programming & IT and Internet projects | Yosi Ganel: Course Coordinator, Tel Aviv University and Sapir College; Programming and Assistant Director, The Center for Choice in Education | Yossi Tamar: Policy Programming Consultant. Also manages the Constitution Project at the Shalem Center | Iri Rikin: Media Relations[27]

Board of Advisors

ICSEP has an Israeli Board of Advisors comprised of 'over forty of the country's most distinguished economists, jurists and social scientists'. ICSEP states that it is 'completely non-partisan, its board members representing all Israel's universities and a broad spectrum of opinions'. All Board members agree, however, that Israel's economy 'needs basic structural reform'. In 2012 they were listed as:[28]

Former Board Members

Prof. Tikva Darvis | Prof. Yohanan Schamurov | Prof. Jacques Silver | Prof. Arie Avishur | Prof. Avri Ravid | Prof. Allan Kirshenbaum | Prof. Marhall Sarnat

Friends

US Board of Governors

ICSEP's US Board includes Irving Kristol and prominent Jewish leaders, including two former National Chairmen of the United Jewish Appeal. In 2012 they were listed as:

Richard Fox - Chairman | Prof. Irving Kristol, Chairman Emeritus | Kenneth Abramowitz - Vice Chairman | Edward Minor - Vice Chairman | Milton J. Schubin - Secretary | Daniel Doron - Director [29]

Registered address: c/o Fox Enterprises, 955 Chesterbrook Road, Suite 125, Wayne, PA 19087-5615, +1 (610) 640-1400

American Friends

ICSEP's Friends organization in the US is chaired by Richard Fox, Chairman of the Board of Temple University, a leading developer and a major figure in American-Jewish politics. In 2012 they were listed as:

Howard Berkowitz | Midge Decter | Eugene M. Grant | Roger Hertog | Robert Israeloff | Morris M. Kaplan | Curtis Katz | Leslie Lenkowsky | Prof. Henry G. Manne | Prof. David Meiselman | Prof. David Sidorsky | Prof. S. Fred Singer | Judge Abraham Sofaer

UK Board of Governors

David Lewis - CBE, FCA, President | Lord Stanley Kalms - Vice-President | Lord Young of Graffham - Patron | The late Sir Emmanuel Kaye - founder | Sir Ronald Cohen - President Emeritus

Registered address: c/o David Lewis, Chelsea House, Westgate, Hanger Lane, London, W51DR, +44 (208) 998-8822

British Friends

Sir David Alliance | Stephen Barclay | Stanley Cohen | Ivor Connick | Walter Goldsmith | Maurice Hatter | Sir Anthony Jacobs | Sir Geoffrey Leigh | Conrad Morris | Gerald Ronson | Arthur Seldon | Sir Sigmund Sternberg | Monty Sumray | Barry Townsley | Fred Worms [30]
Former
Bernard Groveman - former Vice Chairman, US Board of Governors | Alexander Grass - former American Friend | Arthur Powell - former American Friend | Stephen Shalom - former American Friend | James S. Tisch - former American Friend | David Wachs - former American Friend | Alan Wurtzel - former American Friend | Lord Harris of High Cross - former patron, UK Board of Governors | Arthur Seldon - former British friend | Sir Leslie Porter - former British friend

Funding

ICSEP's website states that it is a registered charity in the USA under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (Tax ID # 13-3129249). The centre does not reveal any information about the identity of its major funders. Its annual required budget in 2003, according to archived webpages, was $690,000, broken down as follows:

High school economic education program $125,000
University seminars $165,000
“Kivunim” website $250,000
Policy work and administration $150,000
Annual Total $690,000[31]

These archived pages also reveal that the center formerly employed director Daniel Doron's wife Susan Doron to assist with 'all foreign-related work, with media work and with fundraising.'[32]

Lewis Family Charitable Trust

The Lewis Family Charitable Trust (registered charity number 259892) has allowed the President of ICSEP's UK board of governors, David Lewis, to channel tax-deductible donations to ICSEP, as blogger Tony Greenstein points out[33].

It gave the following amounts to ICSEP:

2007: £9,568[34]
2008: £20,017[35]
2009: £25,552[36]
2010: £26,836[37]
2011: £52,403[38]

Greenstein also records that the 2004 report listed a donation of £14,276 and the 2005 report a donation of £9,342.[39] In addition in 2007 the Lewis Family Charitable Trust also gave £9,568[40] and the following year £39,521[41] to a group called Citizens for True Social Justice, which was set up by alumni of ICSEP's free market university course.[42]

Publications

ICSEP at one stage published a Hebrew-language periodical called Lihiyot Hofshi (‘To Be Free’), which contained economic commentary, analysis and information on the Israeli economy.

According to Doron, it has also published 'numerous papers in Hebrew, covering topics such as Britain’s pioneering privatisation experience, deregulation' and 'the benefits of privatisation for the environment'.[43]

Contact

Address:

59 Hadror St.
PO Box 84124
Mevasseret Zion 90805

Phone:

+972 (2) 534-6463
+972 (2) 533-0122 fax

Email:

mail@icsep.org.il

Website:

http://icsep.org.il

Notes

  1. 'About us', ICSEP website
  2. Support: Why Support ICSEP?, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  3. Praise, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  4. Support: ICSEP's impact, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  5. Opening Remarks at the Strategic Forums Sponsored by Paul Merage, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  6. Finance Ministry thanks ICSEP, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  7. Support: ICSEP's impact, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  8. Research Projects, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  9. Reform Plans, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  10. High School Courses, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  11. University Seminars, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  12. Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.107, Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012
  13. About - Mission, ICSEP, accessed 10 August 2012
  14. Books & Translations, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  15. Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.111-112, Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012
  16. Kivunim website, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  17. Program, The 6th Conference, herzliyaconference.org, accessed 6 June 2012.
  18. The Twelfth Annual Herzliya Conference, herzliyaconference.org, accessed 1 June 2012.
  19. Conference on the Balance of National Strength and Security, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  20. Taming Leviathan - Waging the war of ideas around the world, p.111, Institute of Economic Affairs, accessed 9 August 2012
  21. Israel’s Prosperity, Peace Depend on Economic Reform, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  22. Riman Barakat, Quietly, East Jerusalem Palestinians acquiring Israeli citizenship, +972.mag, accessed 9 August 2012
  23. Harvard Fellow calls for genocidal measure to curb Palestinian births, Electronic Intifada, accessed 9 August 2012
  24. Israel’s survival, peace, depend on economic prosperity, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  25. Opening Remarks at the Strategic Forums Sponsored by Paul Merage, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  26. Opening Remarks to Introduce Binyamin Netanyahu, ICSEP, accessed 9 August 2012
  27. Organization: Staff, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  28. Organisation - Advisors & Friends, ICSEP, accessed 8 August 2012
  29. 'Organization', ICSEP website
  30. 'Organization', ICSEP website
  31. Work Plan 2002-3 - Internet Archive capture 4 December 2008, ICSEP via Internet Archive, accessed 10 August 2012
  32. Work Plan 2002-3 - Internet Archive capture 4 December 2008, ICSEP via Internet Archive, accessed 10 August 2012
  33. The Lewis Trust Group, its donations to Conservative constituency parties, Think Tanks and Palestinian Media Watch, Tony Greenstein's Blog, accessed 13 August 2012
  34. Trustees' Report and Financial Statements 2007, Lewis Family Charitable Trust via the Charity Commission, accessed 13 August 2012
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