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<title>FAFO Report 177</title>

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<H2>The economic setting</H2>
The economic conditions for Palestinians are quite different in each of
the places where the fieldwork was carried out. Rashidiyya in Lebanon and
Baqa'a in Jordan are located in rural areas where agricultural work is a
main income source. Askar and Wihdat are situated inside towns, Nablus and
Amman respectively, thus giving the refugees other possibilities of employment.
In addition we find differences in the legal status of Palestinians in the
three areas. <BR>
<BR>
What is common, though, and quite important when it comes to adaptation,
is that in both Lebanon, Jordan and the West Bank, there is a considerable
informal sector functioning beside the state controlled formal economy (Richards
and Waterbury 1990). By informal sector we mean that part of the economic
activity which is not controlled by the state. The refugees take part in
the informal sector, either because it is more profitable due to their exclusion
from the formal sector, or simply because no other work is available. <BR>
<BR>
The balance between the informal and formal sectors has several implications
for economic adaptations. Informal activities disconnect the refugee population
from the host country's state apparatus, and can therefore be seen as an
obstacle for assimilation or incorporation. In Lebanon, for instance, Palestinians
are barred from getting jobs in the state bureaucracy. In the West Bank
the difference between official and non-official activities indicates, to
a large extent, whether the Israeli administration is in control of the
activities or not. However, as long as there also exists a huge informal
economy among the native population, not only among the refugee population,
the irregular economy of the refugee population is not necessarily a sign
of segregation between Palestinians and host country population. Only to
the extent that the refugees organise their activities separately from the
host country's informal economy, we are able to define the economic activities
as incorporating or segregating factors.
<H3>Lebanon</H3>
In general the Lebanese authorities do not issue work permits to Palestinian
residents. The exclusion of the refugees from the legal labour market effectively
obliges them to enter the informal sector of the economy, which is especially
large, due to Lebanon's long-standing laissez-faire economy and the government's
weak position during the past two decades.<BR>
<BR>
In the civil war period of 1975-89 considerable capital was channelled through
Palestinian national institutions, covering areas from social services to
industrial production, as well as through political organisations. There
was thereby a Palestinian economy separate from the Lebanese. By the end
of the 1980's it was estimated that two thirds of the Palestinian work force
was employed by the Palestinian national institutions, like the Palestinian
Red Crescent Society (PRCS) and the industrial co-operative Samed (Sayigh
1994a:109). This financial source has decreased lately due to PLO's financial
crisis after the Gulf War of 1991. In addition, the political focus of the
PLO was changed from Lebanon to the Occupied Territories whereby the PLO
reduced the economic involvement in Lebanon. The loss of PLO funds, in combination
with the severe crises in the Lebanese economy, with inflation out of control
and an unemployment rate of 35%, has left the refugees in Lebanon in a especially
miserable and rapidly deteriorating situation (Regional Surveys of the World:
The Middle East and North Africa 1994:619)
<H3>Jordan</H3>
Palestinians with Jordanian citizenship have legal rights as native East
Bank Jordanians, and Palestinians are in many ways an integral part of the
Jordanian economy. In some sectors, like in bank and finance they are even
the dominant part. Palestinians do not hesitate to claim that &quot;we built
Jordan&quot;, and that they are the driving force in the economy. At the
same time many say that getting a job now is more difficult if you are Palestinian.
In the state administration Palestinians believe that Jordanians get jobs
easier than Palestinians, because employment depends on wasta - a personal
contact inside the system. The existing wasta-system is a segmenting aspect
of the economy, because Palestinians usually have their own network of contacts.
In the private sector the network of personal relations seems even more
important, especially in small firms where acquiring jobs often occur through
the networks of friends or relatives. <BR>
<BR>
One area of the Jordanian job market where Palestinians clearly are excluded,
is the security-related field. In military academies, students are accepted
only after personal interviews, giving the authorities the opportunity to
prevent Palestinians from climbing in the system. 
<H3>The West Bank</H3>
The West Bank economy is one of dependence. Israel is the largest market
for goods and services, as well as the most important employer of the West
Bank labour force. The intifada from 1987, and later the Gulf crisis of
1990 led to a sharp decrease in West Bank exports. Since the border closure
of March 1993, the access for West Bank Palestinians to the Israeli job
market has been limited. But Palestinian workers still cross the &quot;green
line&quot;, which devised the occupied territories from Israel, to work
in Israel, where jobs are better paid than in the West Bank. According to
unpublished data from the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics the number
of Palestinian workers in Israel fell from a level of around 120,000 right
before the border closure to about 65,000 one month later. Through contact
with Israeli employers, Palestinians can obtain the required labor card.
But around 50% of the workers cross the border illegally, daily or weekly.
<BR>
<BR>
Nablus used to be the industrial centre of Jordan until the loss of the
West Bank in 1967. The local manufacturing industries of soap, shoes and
furniture gives employment for a part of the Askar Camp residents.<BR>
<BR>
In the West Bank there is a huge informal sector of the economy, illustrating
that the Israeli administration is not in control of all fields of the production.
One good example is the taxi-system. In Askar Camp there are around 30 taxis
- none of them registered, in contrast to most service-taxis going to nearby
towns, licensed by the Israeli authorities.

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<a href="_._.html"><img src="../../../../../../../sys/almashriq-bottom-line.gif"alt = "----------------" border= 0></a><p><pre>
<a href="../../../../../../../base/mailpage.html">al@mashriq</a>                       960428/960613</pre>

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