The report highlights that 80% of newly established startups are choosing to incorporate in Delaware, USA, to potentially bypass tax complications in their native countries.
After a military debacle that saw the IDF unable to protect the people of Israel on October 7 – a major failure – the IDF and the people of Israel have made a strong recovery and comeback.
Dozens of Israeli companies applied for the reward. The prize is a joint initiative of JNF-Canada and KKL-JNF in partnership with StartUp Nation Central. The ceremony was held in Tel Aviv.
This fund will not only provide financial backing but also establish innovation incubator hubs, fostering global collaboration in deep-tech technological vectors.
The center's activities will stretch throughout the Negev and the Arava, from Kiryat Gat to Eilat and Sderot to the Dead Sea.
Returning to political calm may not bring investments back to their record levels of 2021, but it would help Israel at least keep up with the US and Europe.
This marks a reversal, as Israel had managed in the past decade to persuade more of its startups to set up their legal identity domestically.
As Q2 closes, all eyes are on Fitch’s assessment of Israel’s economy, which will likely have a significant impact on the country’s credit rating.
Are there not 10 righteous people, in this present government, who, together, can see the impending destruction, ban as one cohesive group, and save our country from the abyss to where it is headed?
Start-ups in Israel are in decline. It leads us to ask: Has the Israeli Start-Up Nation era come to an end?