Palestinian Firms’ Status and Employment Under the Israeli Security Regime: Evidence from Establishment Censuses

Author:

Hlasny Vladimir1,AlAzzawi Shireen2

Affiliation:

1. Economics , Ewha Womans University , Seoul , Korea

2. Economics Department , Santa Clara University , Santa Clara , CA , USA

Abstract

Abstract The Israeli occupation of Palestine is accompanied by violence and a repressive security regime affecting firms’ operations. We assess firms’ status, and female and total employment during 1997–2017 across region–years seeing differently repressive regimes. Indicators of the security regime come from OCHA-oPt, B’Tselem, and World Bank databases. Data on the entire population of establishments come from five waves of the Palestinian Establishment Census allowing for pooled-cross sectional and limited longitudinal analysis. We find that establishments facing tighter regimes – mobility restrictions, physical violence and building demolitions in their governorate – are more likely to suspend their operations or engage in restructuring, rather than continue operating. Repressive regimes are also associated with falling employment levels and in some cases, falling female employment shares. Repressive regimes are thus damaging to employment in Palestine through several channels. Some establishments do not survive, or enter hibernation. Surviving establishments retain fewer workers.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Political Science and International Relations,Economics and Econometrics,Sociology and Political Science

Reference33 articles.

1. Abrahams, A. 2018. Hard Traveling: Commuting Costs and Urban Unemployment with Deficient Labor Demand, ESOC Working Paper 8. Princeton, NJ: Empirical Studies of Conflict Project (ESOC).

2. Akkaya, S., N. Fiess, B. Kaminski, and G. Raballand. 2008. Economics of ‘Policy-Induced’ Fragmentation: The Costs of Closures Regime to West Bank and Gaza. Middle East and North Africa – Working Paper Series 50, World Bank. Washington, DC: World Bank. www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_84244_en.pdf (accessed August 23, 2018).

3. Amodio, F., L. Baccini, and M. Di Maio. 2017. Security, Trade and Political Violence, IZA Discussion Paper 10819. Bonn: Institute of Labor Economics.

4. Amodio, F., and M. Di Maio. 2017. “Making Do with What You Have: Conflict, Input Misallocation, and Firm Performance.” Economic Journal 128 (615): 2559–612. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecoj.12518.

5. B’Tselem. 2014. Gaza Strip: Control Means Responsibility: Israel is Obliged to Allow Construction Supplies into Gaza. Jerusalem: B’Tselem.

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