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News ID: 131395
Publish Date : 16 September 2024 - 22:10

Israel’s Inflation Jumps More Than Expected as War Continues

WEST BANK (Dispatches) – The Zionist regime’s inflation accelerated more than expected last month, to 3.6% year on year, as the war in Gaza strains the economy and the regime’s spending soars.
The figure rose from 3.2% in July, the regime’s Central Bureau of Statistics reported. It’s now at the highest since October last year and significantly above the regime’s official inflation target of between 1% and 3%. Analysts were forecasting that the rate would remain steady, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Month-on-month inflation quickened from 0.6% to 0.9%, the highest reading in more than two years. The survey respondents expected a dip to 0.5%.
The Zionist regime’s local-currency bond yields have risen significantly over the course of this year, indicating nervousness among investors. Yields on 10-year shekel bonds are up almost 90 basis points and their spreads over U.S. Treasuries are at an 11-year high.
Prices for travel abroad and vegetables were among the data-x-items that rose the most in August. Many foreign airlines have stopped flying to the occupied territories on security grounds, while fewer ships are calling at the key Israeli port of Eilat because of Yemeni attacks in the Red Sea. The construction and agriculture sectors have been hit by a shortage of Palestinian workers, who are no longer allowed into the occupied territories from the West Bank and Gaza.
Foreign travel prices surged more than 22% last month, while tomatoes cost 37% more.
Add to the pressures is the regime increased spending to fund the conflict against Palestinians in Gaza and cope with skirmishes between Zionist troops and Hezbollah resistance movement in Lebanon.
The central bank has regularly voiced its concern about the impact of the Gaza war on inflation in recent months. Despite the economy weakening, the bank’s deputy governor told Bloomberg in late August that interest rate cuts were probably off the table until next year.
That will be the case, according to Andrew Abir, the deputy governor, even if the U.S. Federal Reserve lowers rates on Wednesday, as most analysts expect it will.
“Inflation’s become unusually high even from a historical point of view,” said Yonie Fanning, a strategist at Mizrahi Tefahot Bank. “The effects of the war on the economy in general and the price index in particular continue to be prominent.”