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Israel will fund a
NIS 21.6 million ($6.1 million) program to train and integrate more than 2,000
Arab Israeli women and men into the local high-tech industry over the next two
years as part of a continued effort to narrow the employment and income gaps
between Jewish and Arab Israelis.
The Israel
Innovation Authority (IAA) together with the labor division of the Economy and
Industry Ministry selected 12 programs for the training and placement of 2,239
people from the Arab population. The 12 selected programs will receive an
aggregate government grant of NIS 12 million and the remainder is to be
financed by private funds.
Participation rates
of the Arab population in the tech employment market remains low despite
numerous government initiatives.
Long touted as the
growth engine of the Israeli economy, the tech sector accounts for around 25%
of the country’s total income tax revenue and constitutes about 10% of the
workforce. Arab Israelis make up some 20% of the population but just 2% of Arab
men and 1% of Arab women working in the tech industry, according to government
data. That compares with 12% of secular Jewish men and 8% of secular Jewish
women.
At the same time,
the tech industry is facing an acute shortage of skilled engineers and
programmers. This scarcity could cause the engine to stall, and the country is
seeking to tap into new populations sectors to keep it going.
Low-income
populations have largely been left on the sidelines of the nation’s high-tech
boom, including the ultra-Orthodox, Arab Israelis, and women, resulting in
large income gaps. The ultra-Orthodox and Arab populations, among the poorest
in Israel today, are expected to constitute half of the population by 2065,
according to the OECD.
“This reflects a
lack of the skills needed for them to get high-productivity and well-paid
jobs,” according to the OECD report. “Integrating the Arab-Israeli and Haredim
into the labour market remains one of the key challenges for the Israeli economy.”
This year, over
10,000 workers from the Arab population were employed in the tech industry, but
half of them were in non-technological positions, according to Tair Ifergan,
director general of the labor division at the Economy and Industry Ministry.
“Although the
percentage of Arab citizens employed in the tech industry is still below the
national average, in recent years, we have seen an increasingly positive trend
of integration of the Arab population and a significant increase in the number
of Arab students studying tech-related subjects in academia,” said IIA CEO Dror
Bin. “We aim to increase the number of Arab citizens employed in tech and
create a significant economic, social and regional change as part of the
strengthening and diversification of the Israeli tech sector.”
“Rapid and proper
integration of graduates of these programs will be one of the significant steps
toward reducing the shortage of tech personnel in the long term,” Bin noted.
More than half of
the selected programs in the project will train for advanced development
positions in the tech sector, such as programming, and include theoretical and
practical on-the-job training. Soft skills will also be part of the training to
expand the candidates’ skill set and boost their chances of getting a
high-quality job in tech.
One of the funded
programs will provide training and help in the job placement in the following
four tech areas: robotics and automation, verification, DevOps and data
analytics. Another program focuses on career development and promotion to
managerial positions for tech workers in Arab society.
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