This underutilization brings us to what we believe is the biggest threat to Israel’s continued economic growth: low participation
in the economy. A little over half of Israel’s workforce contributes to the economy in a productive way, compared to a 65
percent rate in the United States. The low Israeli workforce participation rate is chiefly attributable to two minority communities:
Among mainstream Israeli Jewish civilians aged twenty-five to sixty-four, to take one metric, 84 percent of men and 75 percent
of women are employed. Among Arab women and
The ultra-Orthodox, or
The result of this has been triply harmful to the economy.
There are two primary reasons why Israeli Arabs have low participation rates in the economy. First, because they are not drafted
into the army, they, like the
Each year, thousands of Arab students graduate from Israel’s technology and engineering schools. Yet, according to Helmi Kittani and Hanoch Marmari, who codirect the Center for Jewish-Arab Economic Development, “only a few manage to find jobs which reflect their training and skills. . . . Israel’s Arab graduates need to be equipped with a crucial resource which the government cannot supply: a network of friends in the right places.”8 And in the absence of those personal connections, Israeli Jews’ mistrust of Israeli Arabs is more likely to hold sway.
Another problem is the bias within the Israeli Arab community against women in the workplace. A 2008 study by Women Against Violence, an Israeli Arab organization, found that public opinion among local Arabs may be slowly changing, but traditional attitudes are still entrenched. In a survey, even participants who “opposed older attitudes” still agreed with the statement “Arab society is predominantly patriarchal, where men are perceived as the decision-makers and women as inferior and ideally subservient. . . . A man who treats his partner other than [according to] the acceptable norm endangers his social standing.”
Despite this paradox, Women Against Violence director Aida Touma-Suleiman said that she sees men as partners for change, including a new acceptance of women who work outside the home. “There are Arab men who are unhappy with this balance of power, and wish to improve the relations between the genders. They see it as in their interest as much as anyone else’s,” she said.9
Yet because of the high birth rates in both the