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Aid
in Time Saves Israel's Financial Hide
On October 24, 2001, the U.S. Senate
approved the foreign aid bill, which had been previously
approved by the House of Representatives in July.
Wrangling over the appointment of federal judges had
held up the bill.
Israel will get the largest amount, $2.76 billion, of
the $15.2 billion aid bill. Egypt will be in
second place with $1.96 billion.
Approval of the U.S. aid package for 2002 was of great
importance because the money was included in Israel's
state budget for 2001. If the aid package was
further delayed, Israel might have received the money
after January 2002, which would have resulted in a huge
deficit in its current budget.
Stated as simply as possible, Israel's state runs its
financial affairs on the presumption that U.S. taxpayers
will supply several billion dollars each year in a
timely manner. Without the aid, Israel could not
afford to subsidize its many money-losing, state-owned
enterprises, grant unwarranted pay increases to civil
services, protect inefficient domestic industry,
mismanage the nation's water supply, and so forth.
As a side note, U.S. aid sustains not only Israeli
socialism, but also Egyptian socialism. It's fair
to ask, then, what U.S. taxpayers get in return for
sustaining Egyptian socialism? Click
here to read an IASPS paper on the subject.
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