Israel Jewish
  •    About Israel Then and Now   

    Israel History and todays life.

    Israel’s Facts

    Israel

    Israel


    Official name: State of Israel (Hebrew: Medinat Yisrael)

    Capital: Jerusalem (Yerushalayim)

    Formal Name: Medinat Yisrael (“State of Israel”)

    Prime Minister: Benjamin Netanyahu

    President: Shimon Peres

    Jerusalem- Israel

    Jerusalem- Israel


    Land Area: 20,330 sq km

    Water Area: 440 sq km

    Population: 7,503,800

    Life Expectancy at Birth: Male – 76.57 years; Female – 80.67 years

    Literacy (ability to read/write at 15+ years of age): Male – 97%; Female – 93%

    Primary Religions: Jewish – 80.1%; Muslim (Suni) – 14.6%; Christian – 2.1%; Other – 3.2%

    Israel

    Israel


    Labor Force: 2.3 million

    Gross Domestic Product (GDP): Agriculture – 2%; Industry – 17%; Services – 81%

    Purchasing Power Parity: US$105.4 billion

    Per Capita Purchasing Power Parity: US$18,300

    Inflation Rate: 1.3%

    Exports: US$23.5 billion (software, cut diamonds, agricultural products, machinery and equipment, chemicals, textiles and apparel)

    Imports: US$30.6 billion (military equipment, rough diamonds, investment goods, fuels, consumer goods, raw materials)

    Government: Israel is a democratic republic. The country’s system of government is based on British common law. Its parliament, the Knesset, consists of 120 members, elected for 4-year terms, under a system of proportional representation. The chief of state is the President, who is elected by the Knesset for a five-year term. The head of government is the Prime Minister, who is elected for a four-year term. In 1996, the law was changed to allow the Prime Minister to be elected directly (i.e., in a separate ballot from Knesset candidates). However, on March 7, 2001, the Knesset passed an amendment that returned elections for Prime Minister to the pre-1996 system. Under this amendment, which took effect in 2003, the Israeli public once again votes only for Members of the Knesset; the Knesset, in turn, picks the Prime Minister.

    Elections in Israel are by secret ballot. Also, freedom of speech and religion are guaranteed under Israeli law.