Executive Summary

"For a small economy, heavily dependent in its trade and capital account transactions on a particular large economy, it may well make sense to adopt the currency of that country"—Professor Stanley Fisher, deputy managing director of the IMF in 2001 and governor of the Bank of Israel in 2005.

This paper is a proposal for a radical currency arrangement by which the U.S. dollar will become the only legal tender in Israel, completely replacing the Israeli shekel, which is also the dominant currency of the Palestinian Authority. The popular name for such an arrangement is "full dollarization," defined by the IMF as the use by a country of "the currency of another country, which circulates as the sole legal tender." Under the dollarization scheme, the United States will become the anchor and Israel the client country. This paper will present four perspectives on dollarization: the Israeli, the American, the Palestinian, and the economists', concluding with four appendices.

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