A new report shows that the demographic predictions
Minister Tzipi Livni has been basing her decisions on is incorrect.
By: YoriYanover Published: August 23rd, 2013
Tzipi Livni's constituency is more
likely to raise puppies than babies, making the demographic threat not so much
the Arabs, but rather the fact that her kind is becoming vastly outnumbered by
right wing Jews. Tzipi Livni's constituency is more likely to raise puppies
than babies, making the demographic threat not so much the Arabs, but rather
the fact that her kind is becoming vastly outnumbered by right wing Jews.
As Minister Tzipi
Livni et al are ending their second week of negotiations over how many Jews to
expel from Judea and Samaria in order to receive from the Arabs recognition of
our right to exist, new figures have emerged that might explain the sudden urge
of Livni and the Israeli left to finish this thing quickly, set it in motion
and be done with it.
It turns out the “demographic bomb” everyone, from
President Obama to the lowliest lackey at J-Street, have been warning Israel
about, does not exist. Or rather, there used to be a bomb, but events and the
economy and whatnot have turned it into a pitiful firecracker. Not only are
there more Jews than Arabs in the entire territory between the Jordan River and
the sea, but the Jewish numbers are becoming even greater, while the Arab
numbers are in the dumps.
Dr. Guy Bechor recently published an explanation of a
demographic study by Jacob Feitelson, using data from Israel’s Central Bureau
of Statistics. The report compares Jewish to Arab birthrates in Judea and
Samaria, as well as Israeli vs. Palestinian Authority demographics as a whole.
The article
was written in response to Israel’s Minister of Justice Tzipi Livni’s distress
at what she believes is the demographic threat to the Jewish state, and why
Israel must rush to disengage from Judea and Samaria to maintain a Jewish
majority. The report shows that the demographic predictions that Livni has been
basing her decisions on is incorrect. The original report can be read here.
Source: Gplanet Source: Gplanet. (The blue line includes
non-Jewish children of Jewish families) 1. Arabs across the Middle East and
especially in Judea and Samaria are experiencing a collapse of their birthrate,
from an average of 8 children per mother down to fewer than 3. The reasons are
the rise in education and in income, and urbanization (smaller apartments,
fewer children). 2. The most significant finding in the data are settler
related births. Unlike Arab and even Haredi birth levels—which are going down,
too, settler birth levels are not dropping off, but, instead, rising. In 1997,
Arab births in Judea and Samaria were at 4.76 children per mother compared to
the settler’s 4.69. But by 2011 that number changed significantly, with 5.07
births per Jewish settler mother versus only 3.06 per Arab mother. The
difference between the two became even larger in 2012. Within pre-1967 Israel,
Jewish birth-rates are currently around 3 children per mother, but the
fashionable thing is increasingly to have 4 children per family. Altogether,
out of 8.15 million residents in all of Israel, 6 million are Jews, 6.5 if you
count family members who are not themselves Jewish. According to Bechor, at the
current birth rate of 1 million every 7 years, Israel will hit 2 digits in 15
years, with the vast majority being Jewish. Source: Gplanet Source: Gplanet 3.
The report pointed out another common error of previous demographic studies:
overlooking the effects of the Oslo Accords on Arab demographics. The Oslo
Accords introduced 40,000 foreign PLO Arabs into Yesha (Judea, Samaria and
Gaza) from overseas, and Israel granted “family unification” to another 140,000
Arabs who became Israeli citizens. This added a significant, but temporary
increase to the Arab demographic data. In addition, in 2003 Israel introduced a
massive cut in child subsidies (it just did it again this week), ending a
situation in which having children was, to some Arab families, a very real
source of income.
The fact that the Arab birthrate plummeted following the
cut suggests the policy, though unkind, achieved the intended results. 4.
Another important factor is immigration and emigration. Israel receives around
18,000 new immigrants a year (including 15,000 who leave and return), whereas
Arab emigration is currently around 10,000 Arabs a year, with some years as
much as 18,000-25,000 leaving each year. In 2007, Jordanian data indicated that
60,000 Arabs had left Judea and Samaria. Another figure not commonly discussed
regarding Israeli emigration is that 15% of the emigrants are Israeli Arabs.
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/livnis-source-of-desperation-jewish-births-way-up-arabs-way-down/2013/08/23/
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/livnis-source-of-desperation-jewish-births-way-up-arabs-way-down/2013/08/23/
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