Brief: Israel's withholding of tax transfers and work permits reflects ongoing security concerns amid Palestinian Authority fiscal instability.
The Palestinian Authority is experiencing significant economic strain as Israel continues to withhold tax revenues and restrict work permits, measures Israeli officials say are necessary responses to security concerns and the PA's continued payments to terrorists and their families.
Israel collects customs duties and taxes on behalf of the PA under existing agreements, transferring approximately $200 million monthly. However, Israeli authorities have periodically frozen or reduced these transfers in response to PA support for terrorism, including its controversial "martyr payments" program that rewards Palestinians who commit attacks against Israelis.
The work permit restrictions similarly reflect security considerations, with Israeli authorities carefully vetting Palestinians seeking employment within Israel proper. While tens of thousands of permits are issued to Palestinian workers who contribute to both economies, security officials have repeatedly warned that unrestricted access creates vulnerabilities that terror organizations attempt to exploit.
Economic conditions in PA-administered areas have deteriorated in recent months, with public sector salaries delayed and basic services strained. However, Israeli security officials note that the PA continues to allocate significant portions of its budget to payments for imprisoned terrorists and families of attackers killed while committing violence against Israelis.
The PA's fiscal crisis is compounded by widespread corruption, administrative inefficiency, and the aging leadership's inability to implement meaningful economic reforms. International donors have grown increasingly wary of funding an authority that maintains policies incentivizing terrorism.
Israeli government officials have indicated willingness to ease economic restrictions in exchange for concrete steps by the PA to end incitement, halt terror payments, and improve security cooperation. Defense establishment sources note that Israel maintains a careful balance between humanitarian considerations and security imperatives when setting policy toward PA-administered areas.
The economic pressure comes as the PA faces mounting challenges to its legitimacy among Palestinians in both Judea and Samaria and Gaza, where Hamas seized control in 2007. President Mahmoud Abbas, now in the 19th year of his four-year term, has resisted calls for elections while the PA security forces struggle to maintain order in major population centers.

