Israel is worth 17.6 trillion shekels, finance ‎minister reveals ‎

If the State of Israel were a public company traded on the stock market it would be worth some 17.6 ‎trillion shekels ($4.8 trillion), Finance Minister ‎Moshe Kahlon announced Tuesday at a special event hosted by ‎the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange.‎

At the event, celebrating the exchange's 65th ‎anniversary, the TASE ‎called on Israelis to participate in the evaluation ‎of the economy's "biggest public company" – the ‎state itself. ‎

Using a model developed by the World Bank, the TASE ‎calculated Israel's estimated wealth as ‎NIS 16 trillion ($4.3 trillion), but when the public's assessment was factored into the equation, the figure rose to ‎NIS 17.6 trillion ($4.78 trillion).‎

The World Bank's methodology was outlined in a study issued in January, titled "Changing Wealth of ‎Nations." The study tracked the wealth of 141 ‎‎countries between 1995 and 2014, but Israel was ‎excluded from it, leading the‎ TASE to conduct ‎its own poll based on the same parameters. ‎

Tel Aviv Stock Exchange CEO Ittai Ben-Zeev explained ‎‎that the poll's questionnaire was designed to ‎‎examine the public's confidence in various ‎‎institutions and its degree of optimism about the ‎‎future of life in Israel. ‎‎

Tens of thousands of Israelis participated in the ‎survey, he said. ‎

The polling found that 77.9% of Israelis believe ‎Israel's economic future lies with the technology ‎sector. Some 62.8% of Israelis said national ‎security is the most important parameter by which ‎economic prosperity can be predicted, and 47.2% ‎believe the standard of living will continue to improve.

The survey further found that 39.2% of Israelis ‎believe in their country's health care system, and 35.3% of the ‎public believes the educational system will continue ‎improving. ‎

Speaking at Tuesday's event, Kahlon noted that ‎Israel's record of uninterrupted economic growth and ‎its falling level of debt-to-gross domestic product ‎ratio were encouraging, but warned that no economy's ‎future is 100% secure. ‎

‎"Economy is, by nature, cyclical and there is no ‎insurance policy for anyone," Kahlon was quoted as ‎saying by the financial daily Globes. ‎

‎"We've seen what happened in Turkey: One move by ‎[U.S. President Donald] Trump ‎created a roller coaster. At the moment, our ‎situation is good, but economic crises have happened and ‎will happen. My responsibility as the finance ‎minister is to prepare the country for a crisis.

‎"A country that doesn't grow is a country that ‎declines, growth is security, growth is money to ‎make the country stronger, for all the things you ‎want. We aspire to reach 5% [growth] per year, and at present, ‎we're at 3.3%, so we need to make more effort," ‎he said.‎