Reuters: Early ballot will not shake Israel’s economy: finance minister
Wed Oct 10, 2012–Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Wednesday Israel’s financial stability will be maintained in 2013, despite an early election called after the government was unable to agree on a budget.
“In July … half the budget, the revenue side of it, was already passed, in order to make sure ahead of time that if the (full) budget is not passed, that revenue, deficit and financial stability will be preserved in 2013,” Steinitz told Army Radio.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Tuesday he will seek an early election after he was unable to agree with his coalition partners over proposed cuts in the 2013 budget.
Parliament will dissolve itself in the coming days and fix the election date, with Netanyahu in charge of a transitional government until a new administration is sworn in. The vote is likely to be held in January.
Steinitz said that in the first few months of 2013, the government will continue working with the 2012 budget, taking a 12th of it monthly until a new budget is passed.
“The election will probably be held in January. I presume that in February, Benjamin Netanyahu will have formed his new government and by March or April there will already be a new budget,” Steinitz said.
Netanyahu has been under pressure from Israel’s central bank to maintain fiscal credibility at a time when the economy is slowing and tax revenues are falling short…Read More>>















