Copyright Guilford Publications, Inc. Winter
1994
1. Introduction
THERE IS A CONSIDERABLE ACADEMIC LITERATURE dealing with Israeli
politics. This literature can be divided roughly into two trends. One is
more "structural," emphasizing political structure and institutions, as
well as the patterns created and transformed since the time of the British
Mandate over Palestine. In this view, the old dominant political center
was undermined and eventually replaced by a "competitive system" in which
shifts of voters and parties along the 'ideological axis" determine the
outcome of elections and the formation of coalition governments (Horowitz
and Lissak, 1989; Shapiro, 1980). The second approach is more
"behavioral," stressing the electoral characteristics of voters. The focus
is on demographic, ethnic and cultural changes and the way in which
political parties are able to adapt themselves to the voter's will
(Diskin, 1984; 1985).
These approaches are founded on a paradigm that has developed in the
Israeli social sciences since the 1950s.(1) This paradigm may be summed up
in two postulates: A) The "primordial sin" of Israeli politics is rooted
in the authoritarian "socialist" or "statist" political culture of the
East-European "founding fathers," who created a rigid "political center"
and a "dominant party," seized control of the economy and diminished
private enterprise. In this way, a statist economy developed, consisting
of heavy government intervention in key industries, and in capital and
labor markets. This process was further enhanced by the Israeli-Arab
conflict.
B) Israeli society is a "sui generis" case; the historical determinants
common to other developed societies do not apply to its historical
experience. It is a classless society that never experienced a ruling
class and did not pass through capitalist development.(2) The social-class
perspective is therefore neglected in academic political analysis, which
instead sees the political system as autonomous and contingent mainly on
electoral choice and party alignment. In this context, the prevailing
notion is that the current "democratization" of Israeli society,
especially the growing "competitiveness" of the party system, strengthens
the sovereignty of the voters and their capacity to influence politics. On
the other hand, the economy is undergoing a process of "liberalization,"
"emancipation" from government control. Thus, the government's power to
influence elections declines, while the impact of civic society grows.
The purpose of this study is not to confront these traditional
approaches directly, but rather to suggest an alternative, broader
analytical perspective. The argument is developed along two main lines.
First, I focus on "electoral economic cycles"--a subject that combines
economic and political processes. This direction is taken in order to
break out from this narrow niche toward a more comprehensive concept of
Israel's political economy. Second, rather than stressing macroeconomic
indicators or the behavior of the sovereign voter, I concentrate on the
changes occurring within the dominant groups controlling politics and the
economy. Without blurring the complex nature of these issues, I hope to
offer an alternative analysis emphasizing the political-economic aspects
that have generally been ignored in most discussions of the subject.
2. Electoral Economic Cycles
In 1975, Ben-Porath published a short article in Kyklos, claiming that,
using simple macroeconomic indicators--particularly changes in private
consumption per capita--one could identify in Israel what he called a
political business cycle. "Presumably," he wrote (Ben-Porath, 1975, 400),
"if this cyclical behavior is induced by a desire to generate a feeling of
well-being before elections, then private consumption is an indicator of
what the politicians are indeed trying to affect." This alleged link
between elections and government-induced macroeconomic fluctuations was
endorsed by subsequent writers. Levi (1984), for example, pointed to
cyclical patterns in real GNP per capita, employment and the real wage as
indicators for such policy; Doron and Tamir (1983) focused on public
spending as a policy tool to generate a feeling of well-being among
voters; Ben-Hanan and Temkin (1986) emphasized exchange rate policy and
the government's impact on the real prices of subsidized commodities as a
means of achieving similar ends.
Several fundamental assumptions seem to characterize much of the
literature on electoral economic cycles. First, most of these studies
adopt the hedonic-rational framework, wherein a government that endeavors
to maximize its votes and spoils (Doron and Tamir, 1983, 142) stands
against voters who seek to maximize their consumption of private and
public goods. The common presumption is that, because voters are
short-term optimizers, they tend to suffer from amnesia and myopia, and
thus become susceptible to electoral economic policy (Alt and Chrystal,
1983, 104). In the industrial developed democracies, where the underlying
parameters of scarcity and demand are relatively stable, this setting
usually creates a permanent cyclical pattern of government-induced
expansions and contractions (Frey and Schneider, 1981).
A second tenet of this literature is the fairly rigid separation
between "economics" and "politics." The economy is seen as a
self-contained organism and government as an external force, generally
regarded as the main cause of economic distortion. Finally, most observers
in this area, both in Israel and elsewhere, tend to concentrate their
attention on aggregate economic indicators. This preoccupation with
overall macroeconomic performance pervades the descriptive and analytical
literature alike (see for instance, the "reaction function" of Frey and
Schneider, 1978).
Unfortunately, these basic perceptions are potentially misleading in a
number of different ways. First, while the focus on short-term goals may
be useful in explaining the reelection of a ruling party, it is not very
revealing when we deal with dramatic electoral shifts, such as the ones
occurring during the 1977 and 1992 elections in Israel. This inherent
limitation is acknowledged by Ben-Hanan and Temkin (1986), who found a
progressive shortening of pre-election economic upswings and wondered
whether the 1977 elections marked the "end of the electoral economic cycle
in Israel" (23). Although their answer was negative, they also argued that
there was most likely a broader transformation underlying the electoral
economic cycle, which gradually altered the political rules of the game.
Long-term economic and political changes slowly undermined the
dominant-party system, leading to a more intense multi-party competition
and a forced shortening of electoral economic cycles.
The second shortcoming of the electoral economic cycle approach lies in
its formalistic treatment of power. The emphasis is almost entirely
focused on the relationship between the "voter" and the "government."
Elections are primarily a competition over the rational votes of sovereign
political consumers; since elections are seen as the ultimate essence of
politics, it seems only natural to concentrate on the individual voter as
the most basic unit or even the building block of political research. In a
way, this disregard of effective power relations resembles the choice of
many neoclassical economists who, in a world of giant oligopolies, remain
preoccupied with individual rational consumers. A similar problem arises
when, in the larger context of economic coalitions, one continues to view
the government as the ultimate center of power. In Israel, this view
endows the government with an immense ability to intervene and distort
economic performance. The "socialist" tradition, it is often argued,
generated a bureaucratic-collectivist political culture (Eisenstadt,
1967), which instituted the supremacy of the political orientation over
the business orientation (Shapiro, 1977) and thus propagated the
domination of politics over economic affairs (Arian, 1985, ch. 3).
Electoral economics is then taken as evidence for the "demonic" power of
the Israeli government, which works to harm economic performance and
undermine its democratic basis (e.g., Aharoni, 1991, 127-31).
Unfortunately, this view may not be very adequate for the Israeli case, at
least not since the 1970s.
As I see it, the neoclassical notion of market-like interaction between
autonomous voters and omnipotent politicians serves to divert attention
from a different, and perhaps far more important, relationship. The
crucial political "determinant" may not be the preferences of political
consumers, but rather the underlying structure of political-economic
power. From this perspective, electoral politics is only part of a wider
struggle ranging among the main power groups within the economy. According
to Ferguson (1983, 6), there is an increasing need for research along
these latter lines. In his view, "it is high time to begin developing a
different approach--a fresh account of political systems in which business
elites, not voters, play the leading part; an account that treats mass
party structures and voting behavior as dependent variables" to be
examined "in a context of class conflict and change within the business
community."
Challenging Down's emphasis on individual utility and Olson's on group
benefit, Ferguson suggests an "investment theory of political parties," an
alternative approach that analyses changes in political hegemony as part
of a more fundamental transformation in the structure of economic power.
The central issue is not how politicians interact with voters, but the
changing role of government in the wider context of power coalitions.
Instead of focusing on the way in which political parties sway the masses,
we should look for those long-term economic processes that transform the
structure of political power and alter the relative position of government
within that structure.
This leads us to the third weakness of the electoral economic cycle
approach: its exclusive reliance on macroeconomic indicators. The
difficulty with aggregate or average variables such as private
consumption, government spending, taxes or subsidies is that they do not
tell us much about the underlying processes of restructuring. For example,
a rise in real private consumption per capita may serve to conceal a
redistribution of income that makes one part of the population better off
by worsening the living standard of the other part. Similarly, an increase
in government spending may be the outcome of a decline in orders from one
group of firms, coupled with a larger increase in procurement from the
remaining contractors.(3)
Disaggregated indicators in fact are necessary if we are to gain a
better understanding of long-term structural processes. In order to grasp
the realignment of political power, we must start by looking into matters
such as the distribution of income and wealth, the allocation of public
spending, the relative burden of taxes, and the differential flow of
government subsidies. The nature of these structural changes may then help
explain major shifts in the ideologies, creeds, and sentiments of the
ruling elites, whose general "mood" trickles down through the various mass
media and gets assimilated by the voting population (Ferguson, 1983,
20-30). At the same time, one should not ignore all aggregate indicators,
particularly those related to the labor market. Indeed, the very ability
of the government to affect real wages and overall employment is, to a
large extent, an indicator of its legitimacy and support among the key
economic power groups. Given the crucial impact of these sentiments on
voting behavior, our task then is to explain their structural origin.(4)
To do that, we will first explore those long-term political-economic
processes which, since the early 1970s, have altered the dominant
ideologies and policies in the western countries, and then examine the
relevance of such changes for the Israeli case.
3. From Political Business Cycles to Political Trend
The term "political business cycle" was first coined by Michal Kalecki,
in his 1943 article on the "Political Aspects of Full Employment."
Explaining the role of democratic government in advanced capitalist
economies, Kalecki observed a fundamental transformation from the prewar
period. Contrary to the early experience, when the emphasis was on the
particular needs of business, the Great Depression convinced many
governments of the need to actively regulate the overall level of economic
activity. The main difficulty in achieving this goal arose from the
objection of big business. While business leaders may agree to the use of
expansionary policy as a means of preserving the legitimation of the
regime, they strongly oppose any government attempt to maintain full
employment. Kalecki pointed out that, although higher employment may lead
to higher profits, a commitment to full employment serves to undermine a
far more important credo: the ideological hegemony of business enterprise.
The crux of the matter, which big business leaders know all too well, is
that their own dominance can be sustained only in the absence of any
alternative method for efficient economic organization:
"Discipline in the factories" and "political stability" are more
appreciated by the business leaders than profits. Their class instinct
tells them that lasting full employment is unsound from their point of
view and that unemployment is an integral part of the normal capitalist
system. (Kalecki, 1971, 141.)
As it turns out, then, governments in the postwar era were far from
being autonomous. Caught between their conflicting needs to maintain
political legitimacy and for capital accumulation, these governments were
inevitably driven toward a political business cycle:
...in the slump, either under the pressure of the masses, or even
without it, public investment financed by borrowing will be undertaken to
prevent large-scale unemployment. But if attempts are made to apply this
method in order to maintain the high level of employment reached in the
subsequent boom a strong opposition of "business leaders" is likely to be
encountered. As has already been argued, lasting full employment is not at
all to their liking. The workers would "get out of hand" and the "captains
of industry would be anxious to "teach them a lesson"....The pressure of
all these forces, and in particular of big business would most probably
induce the Government to return to the orthodox policy of cutting down the
budget deficit. A slump would follow in which Government spending policy
would come again into its own. (Ibid., 144.)
Kalecki's theory of a political business cycle was adequate during the
relatively prosperous period of the 1950s and 1960s when, in the context
of overall growth, governments throughout the developed West tended to
follow a counter-cyclical stabilization policy. Since the early 1970s,
however, there seems to have been a profound change in direction. Writing
some 35 years after his friend Kalecki, Josef Steindl observed that
...in the course of the 1970s we entered a new era, dominated by the
conviction that in the future the long-term rate of growth is going to be
much lower--or that it should be lower or must be lower--a belief which in
the nature of things carries a great deal of self-fulfillment within it.
(Steindl, 1979, 1, emphasis in the original.)
While this "end of prosperity" was affected by a combination of
factors, it was mainly the result of two related developments: the
increasing internationalization of the advanced capitalist economies and
the growing concentration of large-scale business enterprise. Together,
these fundamental changes augmented the power of the large multinational
corporations and weakened the relative efficacy of domestic government
policies. With their progressive loss of vitality, government became
decreasingly committed to stabilization and welfare policies. The growing
power of large corporations was accompanied by a consistent decline in
their relative share of tax payments. Labor was now burdened by an
increasing share of the tax bill, combined with a continuous deterioration
of public services.(5) In Steindl's words:
...the business opposition to full employment policies, which Kalecki
had so vividly described in his analysis of the "political business
cycle," gathered more and more strength toward the end of the growth
period. It seems to have now, however, a more persistent and lasting
character than in Kalecki's political cycle, so that we might rather speak
of a "political trend." (Steindl, 1979, 8.)
By this "political trend," Steindl refers to the gradual abandonment of
stabilization goals in favor of stagnation, or at best a "stunted growth"
policy, limited social spending and persistently high levels of
unemployment. In other words, during the 1970s the old postwar order of
political business cycles gave way to a new regime. Instead of active
fiscal policy and an ideology that placed government as a central actor,
monetarism and the "free marketeers" called for an end to government
intervention. The notion of an "overloaded government" was accompanied by
a resurgence of free market ideologies demanding abolition of the welfare
state and acceptance of a "natural" rate of unemployment.(6) A somewhat
similar political-economic transition was also evident in Israel. In my
view, it was this structural transformation which destabilized the
electoral scene and led to the dramatic electoral shifts of 1977 and
1992.
4. The Restructuring of Israel's Political Economy
At risk of some oversimplification, Israeli history may be
characterized as a transformation from a growing economy dominated by a
social democratic government, to a stagnating economy dominated by
business elites. During the 20-year period between 1952 and 1972, Israel
enjoyed a rapid average growth rate of nine percent per annum. Much of
this growth was induced by a substantial inflow of cheap capital, due
mainly to unilateral transfers of reparations from Germany and from Jewish
fundraising organizations. The bulk of this capital inflow was channelled
through the government, enabling it to control the pace and nature of
gross investment and capital formation. This, together with the expansion
of government spending, particularly military expenditures associated with
the Israeli-Arab conflict, made the Israeli government the country's
pivotal economic power. In the Israeli political literature, this regime
has often been characterized as a "dominant party system" (Arian and
Barnes, 1974), a "party state," "corporatism"--or simply the "Mapai
system." This latter term denoted much more than the electoral superiority
of the Mapai (Labour) Party. More broadly, it reflected the cohesiveness,
self-confidence and spiritual hegemony of the ruling elites.
At the time, the Israeli elites promoted social-democratic ideologies
that had prevailed in Eastern Europe at the turn of the century, but the
concrete historical context in which they operated involved a combination
of a postwar welfare state and a managed war economy of "military
Keynesianism." This modern institutional context of government
intervention has slowly altered the structure of the Israeli economy. The
growth of public spending and the expansion of the private sector were
accompanied by a significant redistribution of income and concentration of
wealth. Following the financial mergers of the 1950s and the industrial
mergers of the 1960s, there emerged in Israel a "big economy" of corporate
conglomerates and large firms, increasingly linked together through
complex ownership ties, reciprocal business dealings and mutual
relationships with the government.(7) The heavy recession in the mid-1960s
intensified the concentration process and enabled the emerging core group
to diversify its holdings and increase the integration of its component
parts.
Since the 1967 war, the recession was replaced by economic boom. The
Israeli market suddenly expanded to include one million new consumers from
the occupied territories. Moreover, the postwar years, roughly until 1973,
saw a very rapid increase in the number of Palestinian employees working
in Israel (about 70,000), and a consequent increase in purchasing power.
This resulted in the further development of the corporate core, which by
the early 190s already dominated all of the country's key industries and
much of its financial sector.(8)
To a large extent, the process of corporate concentration was
accelerated by the pattern of capital allocation itself. In its selective
channeling of capital inflows, the government acted to promote certain
business groups that were considered conducive to employment growth and
long-term economic independence. These preferences created an intricate
system of mutual interrelationships among the political, business and
military elites (Aharoni, 1976, ch. 7), which eventually manifested
themselves in a new, more polarized pattern of income distribution. The
backlash against this latter development was increased labor militancy;
this culminated in a "wage explosion" and, since the late 1960s, began to
undermine the "Mapai system." With the unions' support no longer
guaranteed, the government shifted toward a business orientation in an
attempt to break the autonomy of organized labour (Shalev, 1992, ch. 5).
The decline of the unions and the public sector was further accelerated by
the rapid integration of Palestinian workers into the Israeli economy
after 1967.
Thus, business restructuring was accompanied by a parallel segmentation
in the labor market. The first to analyze this segmentation was Farjoun
(1980), who described the growing dichotomy between the "primary" and
"secondary" labor markets. With the 1967 occupation of the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, and the concurrent militarization of the Israeli "big
economy," writes Fajoun, "...came a growing need for a cheap mobile labor
force, with no social rights, a free labor force in the classical meaning
of the term" (115). This was achieved by the proletarianization of the
Palestinian population, which was rapidly becoming the main labor pool for
a growing number of "small economy" sectors, such as agriculture,
construction, services and low-technology civilian manufacturing. The
other side of this process was that the "big economy," particularly its
financial and military branches, came to rely solely on a Jewish,
unionized labor force, with relatively extensive social security and wage
rates twice as high as those earned by the Palestinians (ibid.). This
injection of cheap labor boosted the "small economy" and promoted the
ideology of free enterprise against the world-view of Keynesian
intervention.
The early 1970s were marked by the oil crises and the 1973 war, but
these events merely served to conceal the dawn of a new historical phase.
Since the early 1970s, the political economy of Israel has been
characterized by two principal developments: 1) the progressive
consolidation of the dominant core corporations accompanied by the ongoing
weakening of the government and the decline of the public sector; and 2)
growing dependency on the United States and increasing subjugation of
Israeli culture to the "American capitalist ethos."
The first of these developments is associated primarily with the
evolution of the military and financial sectors in Israel (Bichler, 1991).
Indeed, much of the early emergence and subsequent consolidation of the
large core corporations was due to the expansion of military spending and
the closely related increase in inflation.(9) This process of
concentration simultaneously reduced both excess capacity and competition,
which in turn helped to maintain and even increase profit margins on lower
volumes. On the other hand, the decline in the industrial "offset to
savings" diverted funds to the stock and bond markets, causing a rapid
speculative increase in the volume of financial assets.(10) With the
prices of these assets rising even faster than the prices of goods and
services, the ratio of stock market capitalization to GNP rose from less
than eight percent in 1973 to 99% in 1982.(11) The process of corporate
concentration and income redistribution slowly diminished the government's
economic power. During the earlier phase, the government assumed a leading
role in agricultural planning, industrial policy, research and
development, residential construction and civilian public services. With
the rise of the "big economy," however, it gradually retreated, initially
into a position of a mere catalyst for venture capital and, eventually,
into the role of a virtually passive financier. The 1977 rise of the Likud
party, with its nationalist military orientation and ardent opposition to
economic planning, seems consistent with these tendencies.
The second characteristic of the new, post-1970 phase arose when,
following the end of the Vietnam war, the Middle East became the focus of
attention for leading business interests in the United States,
particularly those associated with petroleum and arms. During the 1970s
and 1980s, the Israeli government became increasingly dependent on
civilian, but mainly military, assistance from the United States. This
support served not only to keep Israel at the forefront of U. S. strategic
interests in the region, but also to provide much needed contracts for the
large U. S.-based corporations, which since Reagan were increasingly
dependent on arms-related production (Rowley, et al, 1989).
The growing dependence on the United States, together with the drastic
restructuring of the Israeli economy, have altered not only the economic
role of the Israeli government but also the country's dominant ideologies.
Much as Steindl (1979) described, the leading business groups in Israel
and the United States began to demand that the Israeli government adopt a
deliberate stagnation policy. The combination of stagflation, declining
investment, growing domestic and foreign debts, expanding military budgets
and restricted welfare services, which first appeared in the early 1970s,
became since the mid-1980s the accepted--and to some extent even
desirable--order. Under the combined pressure of the large Israeli
corporations and the U. S. administration, Israeli governments--both those
led by Likud and those run by a "national unity government" of Likud and
Labour--embarked on a systematic drive to cut wages, revert to regressive
taxation, reduce civilian government spending, and abandon the capital
market in favor of the large conglomerates. Particularly illuminating are
the recent trends toward deregulation and privatization. For example, in
relaxing the investment rules for pension funds, the government has
revoked its commitment to workers' pensions in order to allow the large
conglomerates that manage those funds to use them as a source of financial
leverage. At the same time, all recent governments appear determined to
maintain very high rates of interest in order to support the large banks.
These banks almost collapsed in 1983 under the burden of their own
speculation, and their ongoing bailout worked to undermine the very
survival of many industrial and agricultural concerns. Finally, despite
the backdrop of deteriorating public services and alarming increases in
poverty,(12) governments during the 1980s continued to subsidize doubtful
ventures in military technology (Bichler, 1991; Halperin, 1987), poured
resources into the occupied territories, and started (partly under
pressure from the U. S. administration) to privatize their extensive
holdings.
How did this broad transformation from the early era of economic growth
and dominant social-democratic government to the subsequent regime of
stagnation and dominant business elites affect the course of electoral
politics? What was its impact on the pattern of election outcomes How can
it explain the sharp electoral reversals of 1977 and 1992? We now turn to
these questions.
5. Political Power Shifts: When Do They Occur?
The long-term growth of the 1950s and 1960s ensured the dominance of
the Labour Party. With cheap capital inflows, rising civilian (and, since
the mid-1960s, military) spending, subsidized housing and an
interventionist industrial policy, the cultural and political hegemony of
the Mapai government went practically unchallenged. In this context, "stop
and go" electoral economics was a feasible and effective policy; it was
accepted by the various elites and helped secure their continuous
dominance.
All of this started to change in the early 1970s, with the precarious
combination of stagnation and restructuring. On the one hand, the
polarization of income and growing unemployment tended to alienate the
large unions while, on the other, the fiscal crisis of the government and
the ensuing stagnation made it increasingly difficult to sustain the
increases in profits that the large conglomerates had come to expect.
Under these antagonistic conditions, the labor and business coalitions
began to lose some of their self-confidence and question their commitment
to existing institutional arrangements. Different groups pulled in
different directions, which made the government's political "juggling"
ever more delicate and the electoral outcome increasingly uncertain.
However, when these negative sentiments happened to coincide--that is,
when there emerged a "disappointment consensus" among both the key labor
unions and business elites--the government lost power. I believe that this
is what happened when the Likud first came to power in 1977, and then,
later, when it was defeated by Labour in 1992.
This hypothesis is not easy to substantiate with available Israeli
data. Ideally, we would need to relate the temporal course of electoral
politics to key disaggregated variables that reflect the relative
positions and "moods" of the various elites; unfortunately, such data
rarely exist. For instance, the relative position of the large
conglomerates is greatly affected by changes in their institutional
arrangements with the government; but how can these arrangements be
assessed when even their most rudimentary aspects--such as the size
distribution of taxes, subsidies or government contracts are not publicly
known Also, unlike in many other developed countries, Israel's Central
Bureau of Statistics does not estimate the national accounts from the
income side. As a result, we have no official statistics on the size
distribution of profit, and even the overall magnitude of business income
is estimated only indirectly. Similarly, if we are to observe shifts in
the labor arena, we need information on net (as opposed to pre-tax) wages,
as well as on the distribution of labor income; again, unfortunately,
these data do not exist in Israel.(13)
In spite of these difficulties we may identify three important
similarities between the 1977 defeat of the Labour government and the 1992
fall of Likud.
First, in both cases the pre-election years show a marked deterioration
in the profit position of the "big economy."(14) Prior to the 1970s, when
the economy was still dominated by a Keynesian government, the large
corporate groups were only at their formative stage and their profits were
still relatively low. From the early 1970s onward, however, these large
firms started to emerge as a leading economic power and their net profits
began to grow rapidly, in both absolute terms and as a share of total
business income. This rapid growth ended in the mid-1980s and then
reverted to a decline, which continued into the early 1990s (see Rowley,
et al., 1988). From 1974 to 1976, profits of the large holding groups
declined by approximately nine percent annually. This period saw a
cessation of GNP growth for the first time since 1966. Between 1984 and
1991 there was a persistent decline in profits of the "big economy,"
especially in the years 1990-91. These last years were experienced with
particular severity by the business elite, whose expectations had been
temporarily raised in 1989 by a brief spurt of growth.
From this follows the second similarity, involving domestic military
purchases. With the emergence of chronic stagnation since the mid-1970s,
the profits of the big economy became increasingly dependent on financial
activity and military production.(15) Domestic military procurement grew
rapidly from the mid-1960s until its peak in 1974--a period that also saw
the most rapid consolidation of the big economy. Between 1969 and 1974,
domestic military procurement grew at an annual rate of 14%. As a share of
GNP this indicator stood at about three percent in the early 1960s, and
reached a peak of 13% during the 1973 war. The subsequent period, until
the 1977 dethronement of the Labour government, witnessed a sharp decline
in these expenditures, at an annual rate of 8.5%.(16) Since 1977, however,
under the new Likud regime, domestic military procurement resumed its
upward trend, which continued until the 1982-83 war in Lebanon.
From 1984 to 1990, real arms purchases remained at a more or less
steady level. But overall military sales continued to rise with the growth
of heavily subsidized military exports. Since 1991, however, military
exports began to decline, and a serious concern arose among the elites
regarding the somber prospects for world military sales. The relaxation of
superpower rivalry, the demise of the Soviet Union, and the outcome of the
Gulf War, which left Israel out of the winning coalition, have signaled
the diminishing importance of Israel's strategic position to the United
States. These factors have all converged to generate a sense of
apprehension in the Israeli military-industrial complex.
The apparent downward rigidity of military spending throughout the
1980s and early 1990s--a rigidity that persisted despite growing public
calls for cutbacks--serves to demonstrate the pivotal political position
of the large corporations. At the same time, the pressures to curtail the
military economy, together with the decline of inflationary speculation,
bore heavily on the profits of the big economy. During the late 1980s,
many leading firms and most notably, the country's largest industrial
concern, Koor started to crumble, and that must have undermined the
self-confidence of the business elites.
Although the government was increasingly attuned to the demands of big
business, its ability to further increase this sector's profits was
evidently limited. Moreover, during that time, the business elites grew
anxious about Israel's deteriorating relationships with the U. S.
Administration, as highlighted by repeated revelations such as the Pollard
affair, the Iran-Contra scandal and the Dotan affair. Over the years, the
large Israeli conglomerates became increasingly dependent on U. S.
military and civilian assistance (Cockburn and Cockburn, 1991), as well as
on the intricate set of business relationships with the large U. S.
armament corporations--a dependency that was now increasingly endangered
by the apparent inflexibility of Likud's foreign policy. The souring of
relations with the United States also ran counter to the long-term
assimilation of American values by Israeli elites, particularly the
"business ethos."
This reference leads to the third similarity, since in both 197'1 and
1992 there was growing uneasiness about Israel's relationship with the
United States. The 1974-77 Rabin government first clashed with the Ford
Administration over the peace talks with Egypt, and then with the Carter
Administration over Palestinian self-rule. This latter conflict even led
to an American "reevaluation" of its military assistance to Israel (Gazit,
1983).
However, for these negative business sentiments to affect the electoral
outcome they had to coincide with a broader atmosphere of discontent in
the labor market; indeed, both electoral reversals were preceded by severe
setbacks for the labor unions. The 1960s were marked by a period of
relative prosperity, supported first by the German payments and then by
the post-1967 War boom. Since the mid-1970s, however, Israel entered a
period of "stunted growth." The Rabin government of 1974-77 adopted a
contractionary policy aimed at increasing exports and improving the
balance of payments. The policy included cuts in government capital
formation, an effort to reduce real wages and a move towards more
regressive taxation. The outcome was clear: unemployment rose 50910
between 1973 and 1977. Real wages stopped rising after a long period of
continuous increase going back to the beginning of the 1960s (between 1969
and 1973 real wages had risen 3.4% annually).(17)
The Begin government, which came into office in 1977, embarked on an
expansionary policy of inflationary finance and foreign borrowing; this
lowered the rate of unemployment and increased both profits and labor
income. These developments were short-lived, however. Since the early
1980s, there has been a persistent tendency (with short-term fluctuations)
toward higher unemployment, and which was further augmented by wage
erosion during the late 1980s and early 1990s (both of these developments
were intensified during the 1989-91 period by the massive immigration from
the former Soviet Union).(18) The stagnation became particularly severe
after 1985, when the "unity government" of Likud and Labour launched its
"stabilization policy." The plan included high real rates of interest (up
to 40%), cuts in civilian spending and transfers (particularly social
programs), reduction in marginal tax rates for high-income earners and a
growing reliance on indirect taxes and levies, privatization, and support
for foreign investment. Subsidies for agriculture were cut back and income
of the whole sector, cooperative (Kibbutzim and Moshavim) and private,
declined drastically. The sword of privatization now hangs over the head
of key large government firms: Israel Aircraft Industry (the biggest
Israeli arms producer), Bezek (the communication giant), and Israel
Chemical (the leading Israeli exporter).
These trends have generated growing anxiety among the unions,
especially given the rapid increase in the rate of unemployment since
1987, and the decline in real wage rates since 1989. (In this context, the
immigration from the Soviet Union, which might otherwise have acted as an
economic stimulus, only contributed to a further rise in unemployment and
stronger downward pressure on wages.) The adverse evolution of
unemployment and real wages again points to an important similarity
between the fall of Labour in 1977 and the defeat of Likud in 1992. In
particular, both elections were preceded by a few years of adverse trends
in the key variables of the labor market. In other words, prior to these
two elections there arose a "consensus of discontent" among the various
elites. For the business coalitions, lower profits, falling military
sales, and an antagonistic foreign policy signified a challenge to their
leading role, while for the big unions, permanent high unemployment and
lower wages spelled mass discontent and loss of authority.
In this context, it is necessary to consider the impact of the
"Palestinian problem" and the intifada (uprising), which broke out in the
occupied territories since 1988. Contrary to conventional wisdom, both
leading parties - Likud and Labour (and actually most of the Zionist
parties, including the major parts of the current Meretz--have not
recognized the Palestinian right to an independent state. As a matter of
fact, the Palestinian question has never been a direct issue in electoral
campaigns. The difference between the two major parties concerning the
Palestinian question was merely tactical. The occupation itself was
economically profitable, while its costs were relatively negligible
(maintenance of a small army and "Shabak"--General Security Service--force
with minimal legitimation expenses). However, since the 1990s, the Israeli
elite has started to lose its self-confidence, as it has become apparent
that the occupation authorities have lost control and that terrorist
activities have been spreading and endangering personal security within
the "green line." The elite's despair rapidly shifted the collective mood
and led to a search for a non-controversial authoritative figure who
represented the "old values." The combined weight of these sentiments
projected itself forcefully onto the voting population and likely
contributed to a change of government.
6. Summary and Conclusions
In this work, I have argued that the customary approach of electoral
economic cycles may not be sufficient to explain sharp political
reversals, such as the 1977 defeat of the Labour government, or the 1992
dethronement of Likud. Belief in a sovereign, rational, utility-maximizing
voter does not seem consistent with observed behavior, such as the fact
that--despite a 400% rate of inflation, rising unemployment, the loss for
many people of lifetime savings in the stock-market crash and the costly
military entanglement in Lebanon--a full third of the voting population
still chose to vote Likud in the 1984 elections. Moreover, since the
1970s, Israeli governments found it increasingly hard to run effective
"election economics" campaigns, a fact that further diminishes the
explanatory power of electoral economic cycles.
My own approach in this paper has been to focus not on cases of
reelection, but on those instances in which the government lost power.
These drastic reversals point to fundamental processes of
political-economic restructuring, processes that are often ignored in the
electoral literature but have a profound impact on political outcomes.
Specifically, I have argued that the two cases in which the Israeli
government failed in a bid for reelection arose from a coincidence of
discontent among the business elite and key labor unions.
These reversals, however, became possible only since the 1970s, after
the culmination of some important changes in the underlying structure of
the Israeli economy. Israeli history involved a profound structural
transition from a regime of economic growth with a dominant Labour
government, to an era of stunted growth in which business elites assume
the leading role. The first period, lasting roughly until the early 1970s,
was marked by growing population, rising real GNP per capita, expanding
public services and rising military spending.(19) With the inflow of cheap
foreign capital, the Labour government enjoyed a considerable degree of
autonomy and cultural hegemony; this enabled and legitimized an effective
"on and off" economic policy before and after elections. This process,
which resembled Kalecki's "political business cycle," began to disappear
with the growth of the "big economy" since the early 1970s. The rise of
the large conglomerates, together with the increasing dependence of Israel
on the United States, undermined the relative power position of the
government and brought about a substantial change in dominant
ideologies.
In the political literature, this change is often described as a shift
from a "dominant party system" to a "competitive party system" (Arian,
1977; Shapiro, 1980). The customary notion is that this transformation
arose when demographic, ethnic, religious or nationalistic changes altered
the political preferences of the voting population. By focusing solely on
the electoral form of the system, this view fails to recognize the
profound change in its political-economic essence: the decline and
delegitimation of the political elite itself and the ascendancy of a
political power alignment that established a new political order. It is
noteworthy that proponents of the customary view overlook what might be
called the "democratization paradox," according to which the increase in
the level of competition among political parties has taken place side by
side with the monopolization of the economy. In other words, a reverse
tendency exists between increasing economic concentration, on the one
hand, and the decline of the "dominant party system" and the end of Labour
hegemony, on the other. This evaluation implies that Israel is perhaps not
a special case after all, and suggests that an alternative theoretical
perspective emphasizing social class and the process of capitalization may
go a long way toward explaining its political development.
Since the 1970s, Keynesian interventionism has given way to the new-old
ideology of free enterprise, including acceptance of a "natural" rate of
unemployment and stunted growth. Under these conditions, the political
arena becomes increasingly unstable and "competitive." Although the
government is called upon to "take its hands off the economy," it must
still respond to the plight of the various power coalitions. This need to
both promote accumulation in the big economy and maintain legitimation
with the labor unions involves a very delicate balancing act, which is
made even more difficult by the weaker economic position of the
government. The Rabin government of 1977 and the Shamir government of 1992
failed in that task. Both governments faced growing discontent among all
the important elites and key unions and, with these negative sentiments
projected forcefully through the various mass media, they both fell.
Here, we come to the final point concerning the structural change
taking place in the 1990s. In recent years, the Israeli elites have faced
the reality of the "new world order." The globalization of big business
and the increase of world competitiveness cast doubt on the expediency of
a state of "permanent war economy" for Israel's big economy. More
important, the international market for armaments has entered a new period
of contraction and cutthroat competition in which Israeli companies will
find it hard to gain or even retain market share.(20) Those who want to
survive must realign themselves with international investors, which see
Israel as a springboard for regional business. Also, the Israeli
conglomerates discovered that the international market, especially the
emerging countries, offer great potential--but this depends upon removing
the Arab boycott, which in turn is considerably dependent upon settling
the Palestine-Israel conflict. In short, war has become an economic
burden, both to the multinational corporations seeking to enter the
region, and to their domestic counterparts who wish to ride the tide.
Thus, since the rise of the Rabin regime the so-called "peace dividend"
process began. This process, while largely stimulated by American
intervention in the Middle East, encouraged the Rabin government to settle
the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, which had become a burden, and to move
towards a competitive economy integrated into the rest of the Middle East.
This kind of integration in the new capitalist order led the Rabin regime
to confront both the unions and the nationalistic right. The Rabin
government is taking drastic measures in order to cut wages and social
services, to maintain a high rate of unemployment and to destroy the
unions. On the other hand, the government is receiving support from the
business elites and from the business sector at large, which profits from
the recent upward trend in the stock market and tax-free capital gains.
The three main centers of opposition most injured by this
demilitarization-oriented neo-liberal policy--the unemployed and low-wage
workers, the clerical right and the settlement movement, and the unions
representing employees of large industrial firms--are unlikely to be able
to unite against this trend. Thus, as long as Rabin manages to maintain
solid relations with the U. S. Administration, integrating Israeli
business into the Middle Eastern "Pax Americana," he will not need to
implement any drastic measures, aside from formulating a short term
"electoral economics policy" before the coming elections.
Department of Political Science The Hebrew University Mount Scopus
Jerusalem, Israel
1 The essentials of this paradigm are to be found in manuals of Israeli
political sociology and economics, e.g., Eisenstadt, 1967; Lissak, 1978;
Ben-Porath, 1986. For a critique see Ram, 1993; 1994.
2 Only two studies to date have been devoted to examination of
electoral behavior from a class-consciousness perspective; both dealt with
the reality of the late 1960s (Zloczower, 1968; Yatziv, 1979). These works
predicted the decline of the Labour movement; they did not, however,
analyze the objective development of the power relation between capital
and labor. These studies challenged the predominantly American
functionalist theories and the "end of ideology" concept that prevailed in
the Israeli social sciences.
3 The potential significance of such conflicting developments is
emphasized in Bichler and Nitzan (1994).
4 It is of course true that no rigorous proof that meets the canons of
a "dynamic" explanation of a link between desires of the elites and voter
decisions has ever been provided by "elitist" theorists such as Ferguson,
Domhoff (1979) or Abraham (1981). Nevertheless, the growing number of
'structural' studies showing domination of the media by business elites
are highly suggestive of the possibility that such elites can exert
significant impact on voting decisions. A short survey on the recent
"elitist" studies will be found in Domhoff, 1990, ch. 1.
5 The literature dealing with these trends is summarized in Foster,
1984, 140-46.
6 On the doctrine of "overloaded government," see Huntington, 1975. For
a critique of that doctrine, see Crouch, 1979, 14-16.
7 There is no space in this study for a full description of the
development of the Israeli power elite. A more detailed account of its
origins and development can be found in Frenkel and Bichler (1984). It is
important to note that this subject has not yet been systematically
studied by Israeli social scientists.
8 The literature on core firms in the modern economy is examined and
summarized in Bowring, 1986. The Israeli core corporations are described
in Rowley, et al, 1988.
9 The relationship between inflation and the distribution of income and
assets in Israel is examined in Alexander, 1978.
10 Particularly affected were the assets of the core conglomerates:
according to the report of the commission of inquiry dealing with the 1983
collapse of the stock market (Bejski, et al., 1986, 61), shares of the
three largest banks, which accounted for 7 of the aggregate value of all
financial assets in 1979, rose to 44% of that total by 1982.
11 Data on stock market capitalization are from the Bank of Israel
(1974, 445; 1983, 282). The GNP figures are from the Central Bureau of
Statistics, National Accounts 1972-1985, 166.
12 wee for example National Insurance Institute, Annual Survey, mainly
the years 1987-91.
13 For a critical review of economic data in Israel, see Bichler, 1991,
ch. 4.
14 The profits of the Big Economy combine the net profits of Israel's
five largest conglomerates: Leumi group, Hapoalim group, IDB, Koor, and
Clal. The data are based on the companies' consolidated reports and are
expressed in constant prices. A detailed analysis of the financial
performance of the big economy is given in Rowley, et al, 1988.
15 The impact of military spending on the profits of the big economy
and on the process of aggregate concentration in Israel are analyzed
econometrically in Bichler and Nitzan, 1994.
16 The data are based on the National Accounts of the Central Bureau of
Statistics, various years. For discussion of the feasibility of this data
see, e.g. Berglas, 1983. In Israel there is no systematic information
about the distribution of contract awards; nevertheless we can assume that
the bulk of domestic military contracts flows to the big economy (as many
unofficial indicators seem to suggest); see, e.g., Bichler and Nitzan,
1994.
17 Data on the rate of unemployment is based on the Statistical Abstmel
of Israel, various years, chapters on "Labor and Wages." The average real
wage is computed by dividing the "average monthly wage per employee post"
(before taxes) by the annual CPI.
18 Unemployment rose continuously from 2.3% in 1979--with the exception
of some preelection token decreases--to almost 12% in 1992. The trend in
real wages was steadily upward from 1977 to 1988 (with the exception of
1985, the year of "stabilization policy"). This trend was reversed between
1989 and 1992, when real wages decreased at an annual rate of 6.5%.
19 This resembles in some sense the claim by Gold (1977) that, after
the Second World War, there emerged in the United States a "Keynesian
coalition" among the big economy, the large labor unions and the
government to prevent stagnation via increases in military spending.
20 It is interesting to note that, while domestic military spending has
declined in the last two years, military imports (supported by American
grants) have not. If this continues, the Israeli contractors will
eventually be forced to transform themselves into subsidiaries of their
American counterparts (Tediran, one of the leading contractors, became in
the last decade a considerable subcontractor of American arms
suppliers).
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