Israel's economy is expected to grow 2% in 2023, down from a prior estimate of 2.7%, the Finance Ministry said on Thursday citing the effects of Israel's war with Hamas.
For 2024, the ministry projected growth of 1.6% as its main estimate based on a war that will continue through the year but with the most intense fighting ending in the first quarter and largely contained to the southern border with Gaza.
But a more rapid recovery from the war that would end in early 2024 could lead to growth of 2.2% while a war that continues into 2025 and a slower recovery would mean stagnant growth of just 0.2%.
It noted that prior to the war it was set to raise its 2023 forecast to 3.4%, and the war's impact would be 1.4 percentage points.
The main factor weighing on growth, the ministry said, is poor consumer sentiment that will likely translate into largely flat private spending, Israel's main growth driver, while exports look to dip 0.6% this year.
The economy grew 6.5% in 2022.