export – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Thu, 02 Dec 2021 14:27:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg export – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Lebanese businesses bear brunt of standoff with Saudis https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/12/02/lebanese-businesses-bear-brunt-of-standoff-with-saudis/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/12/02/lebanese-businesses-bear-brunt-of-standoff-with-saudis/#respond Thu, 02 Dec 2021 14:27:41 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=728681   A Lebanese DJ was days away from moving to Riyadh to play for a month in one of the newest entertainment centers in Saudi Arabia's capital when a brief, polite Whatsapp message informed her that the contract will not go through. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter The head of a Beirut-based communications […]

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A Lebanese DJ was days away from moving to Riyadh to play for a month in one of the newest entertainment centers in Saudi Arabia's capital when a brief, polite Whatsapp message informed her that the contract will not go through.

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The head of a Beirut-based communications agency had been negotiating to revive a two-year-old contract derailed by the pandemic for hundreds of thousands of dollars, when after two days of silence her Saudi client, in an apologetic call, said now is not the time.

A business owner who for years exported stationary to the kingdom had to return 20 containers of notebooks and paper ready for shipping to his warehouse outside of Beirut after being told by handlers to "Please freeze everything."

These are some of the victims of Saudi Arabia's furious backlash against Lebanon in October after a Lebanese minister criticized its war against Iran-backed rebels in Yemen.

At the root of the crisis is a years-old regional rivalry with Iran, and Saudi unease about the increasing clout of Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah group. Lebanon is caught in the middle.

In response to the minister's comments, Saudi Arabia recalled its ambassador and banned Lebanese imports ranging from chocolate to chemical products, which used to bring in about $240 million a year.

The diplomatic crisis is causing anxiety among Lebanese, particularly those who work in Gulf countries, at a time when Lebanon is already enduring an unprecedented economic meltdown.

"I felt bad, not just for my part, but for my country and for the expats," DJ Chloe said. "We all have families abroad."

Remittances from more than 350,000 Lebanese working and living in the Gulf have been essential, particularly as the meltdown drives up inflation and unemployment in the once middle-income country. The World Bank said remittances of over $6.2 billion, mostly from Gulf countries, made up 18.9% of Lebanon's GDP in 2020, one of the highest in the world.

While the dollar value of exports to Saudi Arabia has declined in past years, the kingdom had been a top importer of Lebanese products, including soap, printed books and some canned food.

Lebanese government officials have tried to defuse the crisis, saying Information Minister George Kordahi's comments, made before he assumed the post, did not represent their views.

Meanwhile, Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates also recalled their ambassadors and, like the Saudis, asked Lebanese diplomats to leave, ushering in one of the coldest spells in diplomatic relations between those Gulf nations and Lebanon.

Relations had been souring for a while.

In 2013, hundreds of Lebanese Shiites working in the Gulf were expelled on suspicion they supported Hezbollah. The deportations came after the group joined the civil war in Syria on the side of President Bashar Assad, also backed by Iran.

Gulf nations have since imposed sanctions on Hezbollah, labeling it a terrorist group.

In 2017, Riyadh forced Lebanon's then-Prime Minister Saad Hariri to announce his resignation during a visit to the kingdom, citing Hezbollah's domination in a televised statement. The dramatic move backfired: Hariri returned home and restored his alliance with Hezbollah, losing Saudi backing.

As Lebanon's financial crisis unfolded in 2019, Saudi Arabia was absent after having spent more than $6 billion between 2004 and 2015 in investments and government support in Lebanon, according to Saudi estimates.

The deadlock over forming a government was prolonged because Riyadh either backed no one or refused to back Hariri again.

Earlier this year, Saudi Arabia stepped up the pressure, widening the net. It prevented Lebanese produce from reaching or transiting through the kingdom after accusing Hezbollah of using shipments to smuggle drugs. It was a blow to farmers who relied mostly on the Gulf to market their goods.

Saudi businesses signaled the boycott was even wider.

Ajlan al-Ajlan, chair of the Council of Saudi Chambers, said all business relations, including Saudi investors working in Lebanon, would be suspended.

"This is the least the Saudi businessmen and companies can offer to support their government," he said according to the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat newspaper.

Some argued that the Saudi measures amounted to collective punishment that effectively empowered Iran and its allies.

Ziad Nasreddine, an economist whose views align with those of Hezbollah, said Gulf businesses withdrawing from Lebanon open the doors for alternative investors.

"Heading east is one of those alternatives," he said, referring to China, Russia, Iran and Iraq.

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But some of those with Saudi business ties are paying a steep price.

DJ Chloe said a Riyadh-based Lebanese company that negotiated with her and other Lebanese artists to perform in one of the Saudi capital's glitzy entertainment centers lost its entire contract.

The message from Riyadh – "Kindly accept my apologies" – signaled that priorities of hiring Lebanese have changed, she said.

Nayla el-Khoury's Beirut-based communications agency worked with Saudi firms for over a decade and had hoped to revive a pandemic-delayed entertainment project when her Saudi client froze it.

"This was supposed to put food on the table for 40 people," she said and angrily tweeted it at the Lebanese information minister.

El-Khoury blamed Lebanese politicians for dragging the public into a fight that is not theirs. "I am getting punished for the involvement of parties in wars that I don't get an opinion about," she said.

The Saudi measures are threatening to dismantle what remains of a manufacturing base in Lebanon. A banking crisis has already forced many businesses to downsize and fuel shortages made Lebanon one of the most expensive countries for producing electricity.

Georges Nasraoui, acting head of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists, said at least 15 factories from the group's 900 members have transferred operations to neighboring countries in recent months. More are considering moving, putting more jobs at risk.

Imports from Saudi Arabia were also impacted.

Fadi Abboud, owner of Lebanon's General Packaging Industries and a former minister, said a recurrent order for polypropylene from one of Saudi Arabia's largest petrochemical factories was delayed. Then new orders were halted.

"What do they want us to do now? Go buy petrochemicals from Iran?" Abboud said, adding that he may be forced to relocate.

Bekdache, owner of Oriental Paper Products, a nearly 70-year-old family business, was planning to increase his exports to Saudi Arabia to benefit from the collapse of Lebanon's currency that made his notebooks more competitive. He is now considering moving the business away from Lebanon.

He said it's sad that after years of mutual cooperation and investments, "we get this boycott."

"It is as if they are boycotting their brothers."

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Report: Number of Israeli eBay sellers soared during COVID https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/11/11/report-number-of-israeli-ebay-sellers-soared-during-covid/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/11/11/report-number-of-israeli-ebay-sellers-soared-during-covid/#respond Thu, 11 Nov 2021 13:45:00 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=716549   Over 20,000 Israeli businesses began exporting their goods via Ebay during the coronavirus pandemic, an examination commissioned by the e-commerce corporation and conducted by Adkit Business Research Services revealed this week. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter It also said that 50% of small and medium businesses export or intend to export their […]

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Over 20,000 Israeli businesses began exporting their goods via Ebay during the coronavirus pandemic, an examination commissioned by the e-commerce corporation and conducted by Adkit Business Research Services revealed this week.

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It also said that 50% of small and medium businesses export or intend to export their goods abroad. For the vast majority of those who already do, export has become more than 50% of their businesses' sales volume, a number that has increased significantly since the outbreak of the pandemic.

According to data, home design items and furniture are the best-selling Israeli products (27% of all export), as well as jewelry (17%) and Judaica (12.5%). Most of these are exported to the United States, Germany, France, and Italy.

Nevertheless, the survey also showed that while Israeli sellers work with a variety of shipping companies and communicate efficiently with customers abroad, they still run into problems with regulations in the destination country and shipping costs and times.

"Israel is a key market, one of the most growing and sophisticated markets for us," said Alon Paster, head of Commercial Development for Global Emerging Markets at eBay. "In Israel, we see a strategic market that exhibits strong and continuous growth.

"The global market reacts positively to sellers from Israel. And in the last two years, there has been a significant increase of almost 30% in the average price at which an Israeli seller vends abroad," he said.

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2021 puts sparkle back into diamond industry following COVID, ministry reports https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/04/08/2021-puts-spark-back-into-diamond-industry-following-covid-ministry-reports/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/04/08/2021-puts-spark-back-into-diamond-industry-following-covid-ministry-reports/#respond Thu, 08 Apr 2021 06:23:42 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=609685   Israel's diamond industry is recovering from the coronavirus pandemic exceptionally well, a report published Tuesday by the Economy Ministry revealed. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter According to ministry data, the first quarter of 2021 saw a significant increase in all four categories of the diamond trade. Rough diamond import totaled $476 million, […]

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Israel's diamond industry is recovering from the coronavirus pandemic exceptionally well, a report published Tuesday by the Economy Ministry revealed.

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According to ministry data, the first quarter of 2021 saw a significant increase in all four categories of the diamond trade.

Rough diamond import totaled $476 million, a 75% increase compared to the same period of time the year before. March alone saw an 87% increase compared to the same month in 2020.

Rough diamond export totaled $390 million, a 66% increase compared to last year, with a 260% increase in March.

Polished diamond import totaled $647 million, an increase of about 61% compared to the year before, with a 250% increase in March.

Polished diamond export totaled $828 million, an 11.5% increase compared to the first quarter of 2020. March saw an increase of 385%.

The normalization of ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates also brought new sparkle to the trade. Rough diamond export to the UAE totaled $56 million, which makes up 14% of Israel's total rough diamond export in the first quarter.

Rough diamond imports from the UAE to Israel totaled $38 million, which constitutes 8% of all rough diamond imports into Israel in the first quarter of 2021.

There was no direct diamond trade yet between the Jewish state and the Emirates in the first quarter of 2020, considered the Middle East's two main diamond centers, as the Abraham Accords were reached in the summer of that year.

"There's cause for optimism after what was a difficult year for the diamond industry," Ofir Gur, head of the Economy Ministry's diamond and jewelry administration, said.

"Data from the global diamond industry and specifically the American and Chinese diamond and jewelry markets in recent months indicate a rapid recovery. We estimate that just like the first quarter of this year, the second one is expected to be favorable for the industry as well, if there'll be no surprises. "

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Pandemic bites into trade as Israeli export down 3% in 2020 https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/01/01/pandemic-bites-into-trade-as-israeli-export-down-3-in-2020/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/01/01/pandemic-bites-into-trade-as-israeli-export-down-3-in-2020/#respond Fri, 01 Jan 2021 07:27:33 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=572799   In 2020 Israeli export totaled $107 billion, down 3% from last year, a report published by the Israel Export Institute reveals. The number is not high, considering that the International Monetary Fund expects the world trade to decline by a whopping 10%.   Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter The export of tourism and […]

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In 2020 Israeli export totaled $107 billion, down 3% from last year, a report published by the Israel Export Institute reveals. The number is not high, considering that the International Monetary Fund expects the world trade to decline by a whopping 10%.

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The export of tourism and transportation services fell by about 45% due to the coronavirus pandemic. The dramatic blow to these industries was offset by the sharp increase in the export of software and research development services. The Israeli high-tech export increased by 7%, making up more than half of all Israeli export.

The export of goods totaled $54 billion, a decrease of 4% from last year. Export of commodities to the European Union fell by about 14% to $14 billion, and to the United States by about 3% and amounted to about $20.5 billion. Goods export to Asia remained unchanged and amounted to about $10 billion.

The Institute predicts that Israeli export will increase by 7% in 2021 to $115 billion.

"These figures indicate the importance of export in keeping the Israeli economy strong and stable," Israel Export Institute head Gadi Ariely said.

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