High-tech Israel
Thomas Friedman in the New York Times has an excellent article on one aspect of Israel that rarely gets reported: its booming knowledge economy and high-tech sector. The most remarkable fact: “in the first quarter of 2008, the top four economies after America in attracting venture capital for start-ups were: Europe $1.53 billion, China $719 million, Israel $572 million and India $99 million, according to Dow Jones VentureSource. Israel, with 7 million people, attracted almost as much as China, with 1.3 billion.” [my italics]
You need to register for the NYT website, so here’s the whole thing. It’s worth reading to the end:
Question: What do America’s premier investor, Warren Buffett, and Iran’s toxic president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have in common? Answer: They’ve both made a bet about Israel’s future.
Ahmadinejad declared on Monday that Israel “has reached its final phase and will soon be wiped out from the geographic scene.”
By coincidence, I heard the Iranian leader’s statement on Israel Radio just as I was leaving the headquarters of Iscar, Israel’s famous precision tool company, headquartered in the Western Galilee, near the Lebanon border. Iscar is known for many things, most of all for being the first enterprise that Buffett bought overseas for his holding company, Berkshire Hathaway.
Buffett paid $4 billion for 80 percent of Iscar and the deal just happened to close a few days before Hezbollah, a key part of Iran’s holding company, attacked Israel in July 2006, triggering a monthlong war. I asked Iscar’s chairman, Eitan Wertheimer, what was Buffett’s reaction when he found out that he had just paid $4 billion for an Israeli company and a few days later Hezbollah rockets were landing outside its parking lot.
Buffett just brushed it off with a wave, recalled Wertheimer: “He said, ‘I’m not interested in the next quarter. I’m interested in the next 20 years.’ ” Wertheimer repaid that confidence by telling half his employees to stay home during the war and using the other half to keep the factory from not missing a day of work and setting a production record for the month. It helps when many of your “employees” are robots that move around the buildings, beeping humans out of the way.
So who would you put your money on? Buffett or Ahmadinejad? I’d short Ahmadinejad and go long Warren Buffett.
Why? From outside, Israel looks as if it’s in turmoil, largely because the entire political leadership seems to be under investigation. But Israel is a weak state with a strong civil society. The economy is exploding from the bottom up. Israel’s currency, the shekel, has appreciated nearly 30 percent against the dollar since the start of 2007.
The reason? Israel is a country that is hard-wired to compete in a flat world. It has a population drawn from 100 different countries, speaking 100 different languages, with a business culture that strongly encourages individual imagination and adaptation and where being a nonconformist is the norm. While you were sleeping, Israel has gone from oranges to software, or as they say around here, from Jaffa to Java.
The day I visited the Iscar campus, one of its theaters was filled with industrialists from the Czech Republic, who were getting a lecture — in Czech — from Iscar experts. The Czechs came all the way to the Israel-Lebanon border region to learn about the latest innovations in precision tool-making. Wertheimer is famous for staying close to his customers and the latest technologies. “If you sleep on the floor,” he likes to say, “you never have to worry about falling out of bed.”
That kind of hunger explains why, in the first quarter of 2008, the top four economies after America in attracting venture capital for start-ups were: Europe $1.53 billion, China $719 million, Israel $572 million and India $99 million, according to Dow Jones VentureSource. Israel, with 7 million people, attracted almost as much as China, with 1.3 billion.
Boaz Golany, who heads engineering at the Technion, Israel’s M.I.T., told me: “In the last eight months, we have had delegations from I.B.M., General Motors, Procter & Gamble and Wal-Mart visiting our campus. They are all looking to develop R & D centers in Israel.”
Ahmadinejad professes not to care about such things. He was — to put it in American baseball terms — born on third base and thinks he hit a triple. Because oil prices have gone up to nearly $140 a barrel, he feels relaxed predicting that Israel will disappear, while Iran maintains a welfare state — with more than 10 percent unemployment.
Iran has invented nothing of importance since the Islamic Revolution, which is a shame. Historically, Iranians have been a dynamic and inventive people — one only need look at the richness of Persian civilization to see that. But the Islamic regime there today does not trust its people and will not empower them as individuals.
Of course, oil wealth can buy all the software and nuclear technology you want, or can’t develop yourself. This is not an argument that we shouldn’t worry about Iran. Ahmadinejad should, though.
Iran’s economic and military clout today is largely dependent on extracting oil from the ground. Israel’s economic and military power today is entirely dependent on extracting intelligence from its people. Israel’s economic power is endlessly renewable. Iran’s is a dwindling resource based on fossil fuels made from dead dinosaurs.
So who will be here in 20 years? I’m with Buffett: I’ll bet on the people who bet on their people — not the people who bet on dead dinosaurs.
Comments
| 11 June 2008, 7:57 am |
Just a small note: it’s high tech, or hi tech. Hi tec is a cheapish athletic shoe, and high tec isn’t anything at all.
| 11 June 2008, 8:10 am |
It’s pretty often Israeli scientists featured in the new scientist interview. They had the chap who invented that oil and water mouthwash that makes dead bacteria glow bright pink and stick to the bottom of the basin.
| 11 June 2008, 8:24 am |
Buffet’s not really known as an high tech investor though iirc. Good luck to the company in question though,
| 11 June 2008, 8:50 am |
or as they say around here, from Jaffa to Java.
I think that’s made up.
In Hebrew it doesn’t rhyme.
| 11 June 2008, 8:52 am |
Israel was well represented on tomorrow’s world while that was still running, the only items I really remember were medical equipment that went into a rabinically approved standby state instead of fully off so that it could still be used on sabbath.
| 11 June 2008, 9:02 am |
What’s really strange is when someone who has worked in israeli hi-tech or a similarly globalized field (like law, VC) suddenly finds himself dealing with a different branch of the economy (like construction, banking, or government) for some reason.
When you work for a tech company that is constantly trying the keep its products a step ahead of the competitors it’s totally bizarre to hear that the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv high-speed train has been delayed for a couple of years because the contractors forgot that they needed to move the dirt that they dig from the tunnels.
| 11 June 2008, 9:11 am |
Hi Adam
Willyou be writing about this in The Guardian?
| 11 June 2008, 10:04 am |
Matt: that is a good idea, I think business can be the best motor for peace. I am currently bogged down in a 3,500 word article for Traveler magazine on Tel Aviv at 100 (next year) but once that is out of the way, hopefully next week, I will pitch something on those lines to CIF.
| 11 June 2008, 10:25 am |
So who will be here in 20 years?
Given that Buffett is 77 and Ahmedinejad is just 51 I think I would back Mahmoud on any twenty year bet.
| 11 June 2008, 10:45 am |
Israel has long been a home to technological innovation, giving rise to arguably the most active venture capital market outside the US. However, the weakness of the dollar has affected both the amount of money Israeli venture funds have (as most are denominated in dollars) and made Israeli companies more expensive for the traditional US buyers.
| 11 June 2008, 11:58 am |
A bit of nitpicking:
“But Israel is a weak state with a strong civil society.”
No- Lebanon is a weak state. Israel is a very strong state with a weak political system.
| 11 June 2008, 1:04 pm |
With regard to registration of the NYT and other similar websites, might I suggest that you try using
this is actually rather good and I use it extensively.
| 11 June 2008, 8:09 pm |
Interesting but there must be lots of countries “in” Europe with more venture capital investment than Israel
| 11 June 2008, 8:09 pm |
Interesting but there must be lots of countries “in” Europe with more venture capital investment than Israel
| 11 June 2008, 8:51 pm |
I once heard that Israel’s only attempt at developing a national auto industry ended with a single model. This Israeli car didn’t last too long, because it was apparently appetizing to camels.
Anyone know if this is true? I heard it over there, and its very possible I misunderstood.
| 11 June 2008, 9:58 pm |
Shmuel: I don’t know if that is true, but if I am not mistaken, it was Shimon Peres who argued succesfully for not developing an independent auto industry in Israel, but to be the destiny of European industries’ outsourcing. To produce parts for European industries, since the Israeli internal market was too small for an independent auto industry.
| 11 June 2008, 11:42 pm |
Interesting but there must be lots of countries “in” Europe with more venture capital investment than Israel
Nope
| 12 June 2008, 2:30 am |
AIPAC is pushing us to war with Iran for Israel
| 12 June 2008, 5:21 am |
Israel’s political system is not weak, as one poster suggests. It is multi-party democratic, and allows for equitable minority opinion representation in the legislature. In this respect it is more progressive and fair than the British system, which prevents any and all minority parties from having even a small amount of power. A significant portion of the British electorate are effectively disenfranchised, while almost everyone in Israel has a voice.
| 12 June 2008, 6:16 am |
Speaking about those 20 years; If Iran’s barbaric regime is to survive, one cannot stop thinking of the thousands that are going to be brutalised, stoned, hanged, tortured, imprisoned for nothing, made to vanish, those trillions stolen and wasted, opportunities gone to a gutter, while the so called Western World is looking the other way…
| 12 June 2008, 9:05 am |
At any rate, if Shag my dinner jacket does get a new toy he won’t be coming to the Israeli spare parts industry when he can’t get it going.
| 12 June 2008, 9:15 am |
anonymous
12 June 2008, 2:30 am
“AIPAC is pushing us to war with Iran for Israel”
Who is “us”? “us” anonymous internet commenters? Do you think they can find you by your IP address to put you in army uniform?
| 12 June 2008, 7:52 pm |
Whatever happened to social justice? Has not the social net been shredded, in the middle of this much-acclaimed boom?
| 13 June 2008, 2:02 am |
Dinosaurs are extinct. Those who rely mainly on their fossilized remaints as their economic engine will be following them.
At a recent lecture at the Washington DC Jewish Community Center that was part of their series celebrating Israel’s 60th birthday, an Israeli economist remarked that many of Israel’s hi tech business wear three watches on their wrist, one with Israel’s time, one with New York time and one with Bombay time!
| 13 June 2008, 2:05 am |
Jim S: Yes, sadly Israel’s safety net like those of so many other industrial countries has been shredded in order to free up the money to start and sustain the economic boon.


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