Israel to focus tech education in super-colleges
Fix productivity with incentives
The Ministry of Finance director general also addressed other pertinent topics. He said the Ministry of Finance was trying to promote competition at the ports and in the electricity sector in an effort to raise productivity in the market. He said the ministry did not have the offensive tools to take on the union boards which is why it relied on incentives to sector workers in return for promises of increased productivity.
Babad said Israel is in the bottom ranks of place in the world that are friendly to businesses. He listed a few steps the ministry was planning, including a ‘one stop shop’ for business and asset registration and the transfer of some measures to private bodies. The ministry will also place some other bureaucratic steps online to ease access.
“We will present a significant proposal on metropolitan trains”
The Ministry of Finance will return to a public-private partnership (PPP) model and significantly expand its projects for mass transit in the metropolitan areas, said budgets department director Amir Levi. The PPP model was criticized harshly in the wake of the cancellation of the MTS tender for building a light rail train in the Dan metropolitan and its nationalization. The ministry has since admitted it made a mistake.
“We are very, very, very, very behind in mass transit in Israel,” said Levi on Monday at the conference. “One way to address it is through demand; I talked earlier about Waze and other ride-share efforts. On the supply side, we are about to start a very significant plan for metropolitan trains in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Haifa. We understand the best way to execute these projects is in partnership with the private sector and the cooperation of the capital markets. For the 2017-2018 budget, we will present a significant proposal on metropolitan trains based in PPP.”
“Real estate is sick; the government is failing on building starts”
“The real estate sector in Israel is rotten in almost every component,” said Prof. Eckstein on Monday. “Building starts have not risen per capita; what was done at the beginning of the 1990s is no longer happening.”
The Ministry of Finance responded harshly on Sunday to a document published by Eckstein claiming the “buyer’s price plan” will raise prices. Ministry sources accused the authors of charlatanism. Director general Babad said at the conference the ministry’s target for building starts in 2016 was 60,000 with 65,000 in 2017.
Amiram Barkat