COVID-19 lockdown may last over a month: How will Israelis be affected?
Families with wages of up to NIS 5,000 and NIS 10,000 reported a loss of income of 20.2% and 20.8%, respectively; those making up to NIS 15,000 reported a 16.4% loss. The average drop for all households has been 19.5%.As the average income per family drops, its consumption, in turn, will also drop – making the likelihood of businesses bouncing back lower as the lockdown continues.In the current lockdown exit plan, classes for third and fourth grades aren’t expected to return until November, meaning parents of young children will be expected to work from home to help care for them as they attempt to study from home.Restaurants won’t open as normal until the country will go down to 100 new COVID-19 patients per day, which is hoped to happen in late December. The total cost of keeping children at home and closing restaurants, cafés, cinemas and theaters until the year ends is unknown.On Tuesday, the Bank of Israel reported that it approved an extension period on payments owed by households until the end of the year. This includes mortgage payments and loans of up to NIS 100,000. The bank made it clear that “postponing return payments is, essentially, taking on a new loan which will have more costs.”In a Wednesday press release, the Arlosoroff Forum for Fair Employment claimed that the banks could have frozen such payments for several months without asking for any interest.“This isn’t a real gesture of grace,” the forum claimed.While all banks agreed to join the outlay suggested by Bank of Israel, credit card companies Isracard and Max didn’t, with Israel Credit Cards only partially joining the outlay.
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