A proposed income-tax break for Beer Sheva was discussed briefly Monday night by the ministerial committee on legislation, but the debate was postponed to next week. The bill, sponsored by Likud MK Shalom Dano, would give Beer Sheva residents a 10% tax credit on taxable income, meaning someone earning 140,000 shekels a year would save 14,000 shekels in tax.
A separate Knesset Finance Committee discussion is expected today on attracting population to the Golan Heights, and part of it is likely to focus on expanding tax incentives there. The article says such incentives are expensive and ineffective, citing a Bank of Israel study that put the cost of attracting one household to a favored locality at 340,000 shekels over four years.
The piece argues that lawmakers have turned legal requirements into a way of tailoring benefits to specific cities. It recalls how previous criteria were adjusted to include Nof HaGalil, Ashkelon, and settlement localities, and says Dano’s Beer Sheva proposal was written with a sequence of filters meant to exclude Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Haifa while applying only to Beer Sheva. The expected annual cost is about 600 million shekels.
The bill has backing from coalition and opposition members, including all Yisrael Beiteinu MKs and Yesh Atid MK Yasmin Friedman, who lives in Beer Sheva. The article says the Finance Ministry, Tax Authority, Chief Economist, and Budget Division oppose the move, warning that in 2025, before new additions this year, residents elsewhere already paid an extra 2.8 billion shekels to fund the tax breaks, which now cover 15% of Israel’s population. It also notes that about 13% of beneficiaries are not eligible in practice, the breaks mostly help higher earners, and Beer Sheva already received 1.16 billion shekels in government support less than a year ago for innovation, cyber labs, jobs, urban renewal, and transport.