Economic data has recently revealed not only the extent of Arab employment in the joint industrial zones in Judea and Samaria, but also the economic harm the boycott movement is causing the local Arabs.
In a special pavilion that opened Sunday at Deutscher Israelkongress, the largest European pro-Israel conference, with over 3,000 people in attendance, Minister of Strategic Affairs Gilad Erdan and the Mayor of the Jordan Valley Regional Council David Elhayani presented data revealing that coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians is the best and most beneficial solution for all sides in the region.
According to data from Israel’s Civil Administration, some 25,000 workers, 18,000 of whom are Arab, are employed in the joint economic zones located within Judea and Samaria. The Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics also cites that Palestinians working in Israeli jobs account for 11.7% of the Arab workforce in Judea and Samaria in 2014, and their total salaries in the West Bank in 2013 made up 12.3% of the GDP of the entire PA.
The data highlights the fallacies of boycott activists’ actions against factories in Judea, Samaria and in the Jordan Valley directly and significantly affect the economic well being of both Palestinians and the Palestinian economy.
According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, in 2015 the wages of PA Arabs working in Israel were significantly higher than the salaries of their neighbors employed in the PA. The average daily wage of Palestinians working for Israelis was $50.46, twice the daily average wage of $24.46.
Arabs who worked in the settlements, the Jordan Valley, and the joint industrial zones earned three times more than their compatriots in the Gaza Strip, who earn $17.2 if they’re lucky enough to find work in a 40-60% jobless environment.
The BDS boycott against the farmers of the Jordan Valley has caused significant damage for them and their families. According to figures presented by the Mayor of the Jordan Valley Regional Council, David Elhayani, the livelihood for thousands of Jewish and Palestinian families in the area has been devastated.
The export of peppers from the Jordan Valley also suffered a serious blow following BDS activity in Europe. Farmers in the Jordan Valley were forced to divert pepper exports from Western Europe to Russia and Eastern Europe, where prices are 50 to 30 percent lower. This dramatic drop meant that farmers of the Jordan Valley, both Jewish and Arab alike, saw a significant reduction in their income, with an estimated total loss of $27 million.
Private supermarket chains in Europe are no longer purchasing products from the region, due to a requirement to mark any produce from beyond the Green Line with the exact place of its cultivation.
The Ministry of Strategic Affairs, which is responsible for combating BDS, initiated a joint project with the Jordan Valley Council to assist the farmers in the region. As part of the project, pavilions consisting of the region’s produce (including boycotted products) are being showcased at conferences around the world while emphasizing the importance of coexistence and benefits of a shared economy.
Minister of Strategic Affairs and Public Diplomacy Gilad Erdan said that he is proud to present the agricultural produce of the Jordan Valley to Europe, and that the key to peace in the region is the continued economic development of the Jordan Valley, Judea and Samaria.
“In this region both Jews and Palestinians live and work together in harmony. It’s important for our friends in Europe to realize that the key to peace, stability and good neighborly relations between nations begins with economic development, especially in the joint industrial zones. Furthermore, the European continent has already suffered the effects of the ill-fated boycotts against Jewish products, and therefore should be wary and resist anti-Semitic actions of the BDS movement,” Erdan said.
Head of the Jordan Valley Council David Elhayani said in a statement: “Boycotts against our products means boycotts against Palestinians and Israelis families alike. The economic warfare waged against our farming communities only increases suffering for all parties involved and does nothing towards creating dialog.”