This book illustrates the role of international economic advisors in the development of Israel’s economic policies. Based on extensive archival and historical research, it presents case studies on the policy impacts of the world-renowned advisors Michal Kalecki, Abba Lerner, Richard Kahn, Milton Friedman, Herbert Stein and Stanley Fischer. The authors evaluate the contributions of these advisors to policy developments in various fields, including international trade and capital flows, exchange rates, fiscal and monetary policy, industrial policy and labor relations. Readers will discover a wealth of previously unpublished information on these advisors’ activities, perspectives on policy and interactions with policymakers and the public. Using the Israeli experience as a guide, the authors subsequently derive general hypotheses regarding the conditions that are conducive to the success of economic advisors.
Table of Content
1. Introduction: The Impact of Economic Advisers in Israel.- 2. Economic Crisis and Policy Prescriptions: the Kalecki and Mikesell Reports, 1950-1952.- 3. Adviser and Activist: Lerner on the Israeli economy, 1953 onwards.- 4.Ex-officio Adviser: Kahn in Israel, 1957 and 1962.- 5. Politicization of Policy Prescriptions: Friedman and Israeli economic reform, 1977.- 6.Economic Analysis, Advice and Stabilization, 1972-1992: the Stein-Fischer Nexus.- 7. Stabilization via Government Accounting Reform – the 2003 Program and Politicization of Recovery.- 8. Economic Advisers and Israel’s Economic Policy: some interim conclusions.
About the author
Daniel Schiffman is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Economics and Business Administration at Ariel University, Israel. He specializes in economic history and the history of economic thought. His publications include: “Shattered Rails, Ruined Credit: Financial Fragility and Railroad Operations in the Great Depression, ” Journal of Economic History, September 2003; “Mainstream Economics, Heterodoxy and Academic Exclusion: A Review Essay, ” European Journal of Political Economy, November 2004; “Rabbinical Perspectives on Money in Seventeenth Century Ottoman Egypt, ” European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, May 2010; “Rabbinic Responses to High Inflation in Israel, 1973-1985, ” in Levine, Aaron (ed.) The Oxford Handbook of Judaism and Economics, Oxford University Press, 2010; and “The Triumph of Rhetoric: Pigou as Keynesian Whipping Boy and its Unintended Consequences, ” (with Robert Leeson) in Leeson, Robert (ed.), Hayek, A Collaborative Biography Part III: Fraud, Fascism and Free Market Religion, Archival Insights into the Evolution of Economics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2014. Schiffman studied at New York University (B.A.) and Columbia University (M.A., Ph.D.). He received the Economic History Association’s Allan Nevins Prize for best Ph.D. dissertation on the economic history of North America.
Warren Young is Associate Professor of Economics and Director of the Azrieli Center for Economic Research at Bar Ilan University, Israel. He is the author and editor of many books and papers on the history of modern Macroeconomics and other topics, including the Economics of Israel. He has been a Visiting Professor at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand; Deakin University, Australia; Ben-Gurion University, Israel; Tepper School of Business, Carnegie-Mellon University; Center for the Study of Economic Efficiency, Arizona State University; and a Visiting Scholar at Wolfson College, Cambridge. He was a consultant to the Archives Project at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Young holds a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, England.
Yaron Zelekha is Associate Professor at the School of Business, Ono Academic College and a leading public lecturer and economic consultant. At Ono Academic College, he is President of the Higher Academic Council, Head of the Accounting Specialization, and former Dean of the Faculty of Business. He served as the Accountant-General of the State of Israel in 2003-2007, as head of economic affairs in the Prime Minister’s Office in 1996-1998, and in various corporate positions, including board memberships and chairmanships. He has chaired several government-appointed committees and received numerous prizes for his government and policy work. In his public lectures, he analyzes Israel’s socioeconomic problems and advocates policy reforms to promote sustainable and inclusive growth. As a consultant, he specializes in mediation and
arbitration of business and labor disputes. He has published five books and dozens of articles in both Hebrew and English. His books are:
The Black Guard (2008),
Uncertainty, Expectations and Macroeconomic Policy in Israel (2009),
Reforming the Consumption Patterns (2011),
The Macroeconomics of Corruption (2013) and
The Four Hundred Blows and Other Movies: On Leadership, Values, Ethics and Esthetics in Twentieth-Century Cinema (2015). Zelekha holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Bar Ilan University and is a Certified Public Accountant.