Economy03:15 · 18m ago

Nvidia's Impact Skews Israel's Economic Growth and Fiscal Data

Calcalist
Translated & summarized from Calcalist by baba
The story · English

Israel's economy has shown surprising growth and fiscal improvement despite ongoing challenges such as a slow private consumption recovery and only about 10% of the workforce employed in high-tech sectors. Economists Alex Zvezhinsky of Meitav and Yonatan Katz of Leader have identified that this unexpected economic performance is largely driven by the activities of Nvidia, particularly through its Israeli subsidiary Mellanox. Mellanox's operations, which include development, management, and intellectual property registered in Israel, contribute significantly to export figures, even though the physical chip manufacturing occurs abroad. Katz estimates Mellanox's export-related activities could reach nearly $20 billion annually by early 2026, contributing at least $1.5 billion in tax revenues and boosting government income forecasts by around 7 billion shekels.

Zvezhinsky's analysis suggests that without this exceptional activity, Israel's 2025 growth rate would be about 1.6% instead of 2.9%, and the economy would have contracted by 10.5% in the first quarter of 2026 rather than shrinking by 3.8%. This concentration of economic performance in one company creates a "macro illusion," potentially masking slower recovery in other sectors and posing fiscal risks if the government bases spending on these exceptional revenues. The situation also raises concerns about macroeconomic concentration risks, similar to historical cases like Nokia in Finland and Samsung in South Korea, where reliance on a single major company made the economy vulnerable.

While the accounting methods used to measure this activity comply with international standards, the phenomenon challenges whether current macroeconomic data accurately reflect Israel's broader economic reality. The success of Nvidia and Mellanox is a significant achievement for Israel's high-tech sector, but their outsized influence on national economic indicators calls for cautious interpretation of growth and fiscal health metrics. The key question now is whether Israel's economic data still represent the entire economy or increasingly reflect the performance of this single exceptional company.

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