Israeli Cabinet OKs Sharp Cut in Budget
- Share via
JERUSALEM — The Israeli Cabinet on Sunday unanimously approved a $23-billion budget for 1985-86, a cut of nearly $2 billion from last year’s actual spending, Cabinet Secretary Yossi Beilin announced.
Beilin said the Cabinet also approved a “national agreement for the stabilization of the economy”--an accord on wage and price controls reached Thursday by the government, unions and industrialists to help bring down Israel’s raging inflation.
Despite a sharp drop in the monthly inflation rate to 3.7% in December as a result of a wage and price freeze adopted in November, inflation for 1984 was 445%.
Finance Minister Yitzhak Modai told reporters that the budget cuts alone will not bring down inflation but that the entire package together should bring it “to something like 4%-6%.”
The wage-price agreement approved Sunday is to last eight months and will replace the three-month freeze, which expires Feb. 4.
The government estimates that subsidy cuts on goods and services also will enable it to save $1 billion.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.