Israel: Investing in Israel
Israel has a liberal investment system and most activities are open to both private national and foreign investors. According to UNCTAD's World Investment Report 2024, Israel's inward investment flows decreased to USD 16.4 billion in 2023, compared to USD 23 billion one year earlier. At the end of the same period, the total stock of inward FDI stood at USD 244.4 billion. According to the Chief Economist’s Office, in 2023, foreign investment in Israeli hi-tech dropped 24%, excluding a major Intel investment, with 1,563 deals, down 62% from 2,502 in 2022. Key investments included Thales SA’s 3.6 billion USD Imperva merger and Adani Group’s 1.2 billion USD Haifa Port acquisition. Semiconductor investments led at 48%, followed by IT at 31% and life sciences at 6%. U.S. investors contributed 24 billion USD, 73% of total foreign investments, with France at 3.7 billion USD. In the first half of 2024, investments totalled 11.8 billion USD across 910 deals. The first quarter saw 4.4 billion USD, and the second quarter reached 7.4 billion USD. In October 2024, the hi-tech sector alone attracted over 1 billion USD. Most of the FDI to Israel is directed towards manufacturing (especially for electronics equipment, like computers), information and communication, professional, scientific and technical activities, and financial and insurance activities. In terms of countries, the United States and the Netherlands are the main partners (U.S. firms account for nearly two-thirds of the more than 300 research and development centres established by multinational companies in the country). Furthermore, Chinese investment in Israel has grown rapidly in recent years, particularly in software, IT services and consumer electronics.
Israel has a number of assets appealing to foreign investors, including a high-skilled and multilingual workforce and a strong R&D sector (it has the world's highest R&D intensity, almost twice the OECD average – data World Bank), advanced procedures and industrial technologies, governmental incentives and grants to foreign investors, a lean bureaucracy and a diversified economy. The hi-tech sector, especially start-ups, has attracted a great deal of foreign investment. However, the country's geopolitical environment is particularly unstable because of tensions with the Palestinian territories and support for American policy by Israel (albeit improvements have been achieved in diplomatic and commercial relations with Arab countries such as the UAE, Morocco, and – to a lesser extent - Saudi Arabia). The instability worsened following the escalation of the conflict with Hamas. The Israeli government aims to remove trade barriers and encourage capital, including foreign investment. However, persistent trade barriers and monopolies have significantly contributed to the high cost of living and limited competition in key sectors. The government still maintains some protective trade policies, especially for agricultural products. In 2019, Israel set up a centralized investment screening mechanism for certain foreign investments, updating regulations in 2022 to lower the foreign ownership threshold for committee review. Investments in regulated industries (e.g., banking, insurance) need approval from relevant regulators and may require a government license. The Ministry of Defense also reviews foreign investments in the defence sector informally, with other regulations typically applied on a national treatment basis. Overall, Israel ranks 15th among the 133 economies on the Global Innovation Index 2024, 30th among the 180 on the 2024 Corruption Perception Index, and 26th out of 184 countries on the latest Index of Economic Freedom.
Foreign Direct Investment | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
FDI Inward Flow (million USD) | 23,109 | 21,486 | 27,760 |
FDI Stock (million USD) | 184,312 | 226,590 | 235,151 |
Number of Greenfield Investments* | 47 | 79 | 76 |
Value of Greenfield Investments (million USD) | 1,524 | 2,816 | 1,706 |
Source: UNCTAD, Latest available data
Note: * Greenfield Investments are a form of Foreign Direct Investment where a parent company starts a new venture in a foreign country by constructing new operational facilities from the ground up.
Country Comparison For the Protection of Investors | Israel | Middle East & North Africa | United States | Germany |
Index of Transaction Transparency* | 7.0 | 6.4 | 7.0 | 5.0 |
Index of Manager’s Responsibility** | 9.0 | 4.8 | 9.0 | 5.0 |
Index of Shareholders’ Power*** | 9.0 | 4.7 | 9.0 | 5.0 |
Source: Doing Business, Latest available data
Note: *The Greater the Index, the More Transparent the Conditions of Transactions. **The Greater the Index, the More the Manager is Personally Responsible. *** The Greater the Index, the Easier it Will Be For Shareholders to Take Legal Action.
Israel has many strong advantages for FDI:
Main obstacles to the country's economic development:
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Latest Update: February 2025