http://www.rubinreports.blogspot.co.il/2012/11/the-us-elections-impact-on-american-and.html
The U.S. Election's Impact on the American and Israeli Economies
By
Barry Rubin
With President Barack Obama reelected there is
every reason to believe that he will continue the tax, regulatory, and economic
policies of his first term. That means the U.S. economy is
unlikely to improve quickly, steadily, or even at all during the next four
years. The problem is not just Obama’s own strategy on these issues but also
the lack of business confidence in his plans.
Those doubts, along with even higher taxes, a complex and costly new health care
system, and uncertainty about what new costs Obama is going to impose will keep investors, large corporations, and small
businesses from investing money. Thus, unemployment will remain high and
recovery slow or even non-existent.
And that will have a big effect on Israeli thinking. If Israeli
policymakers--and businesspeople--view certain policies as failing in the
United States they are unlikely to adapt those ideas to Israel, even if some of seem ideologically attractive to the moderate left here.
The strategy of higher
taxes, high regulation, increasing government intervention, and bigger
government are already unattractive in Israel and will be even more so. The
Labor Party wants more effort on improving social welfare and lowering the country's high prices yet knows the Obama-European approach has been disastrous. .
Poor performance by the U.S. economy will also have a
negative effect on Israel’s own growth and trade, reducing the prospects for exports to America and by having a depressing effect on the global economy.
In contrast, a victory for Romney would have encouraged
businesspeople in the United States to believe they woulf face policies more
favorable to their needs. With the possible repeal of Obama’s controversial
health care plan, quite costly to employers, and the likelihood of lower taxes
and reduced—or at least stable—regulation, there would have been an incentive
for them to invest and expand their businesses.
A booming U.S. economy would benefit Israel’s economy both
directly and indirectly through its impact on the international economic
situation as well. Romney’s expertise on turning around failing businesses
would have provided the proper management. But that's not going to happen.
While the similarities should not be exaggerated one could suggest
that a Romney presidency would have more closely paralleled Israel’s economic
strategy. After all, Israel has succeeded in recent years with an approach
favoring privatization, keeping unemployment low, and avoiding large-scale
governmental borrowing or debt. This policy, of course, also has costs, as the
social protests of last year showed.
Generally, though no one in the United States thinks in these
terms, the battle in America is between the ideas governing Israel in two eras
of its history. Obama’s statism reflects the early policies of Israel. The
difference, of course, is that those positions were necessary for a newly
born country that had no alternatives but not for the United States in the year 2013. Romney’s approach
represented more of the strategy of Israeli governments of all three ruling parties during
the last two decades.
At any rate, Israel is going to have to deal with a weak American
economy, as well as a weak American foreign policy, for the next four years.
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