The State Comptroller's report warns that Israel's National Insurance Institute could face a deficit by 2035, and that the country is not sufficiently prepared for the challenges of an aging population.
The State Comptroller's audit, released Sunday morning, finds that without structural reforms, Israel's National Insurance Institute will slide into a deficit by 2035 as the proportion of elderly citizens grows. The report points to rising pension and long-term-care costs outpacing revenue projections. It also notes that the government has not yet adopted a comprehensive national strategy for eldercare, housing, and health services tailored to an aging demographic. The comptroller calls for cross-ministerial planning and fiscal adjustments to avert a funding crisis within the decade.
3 developments
- DevelopingState Comptroller reveals Cabinet has not received cyber defense briefings for nearly a decade
- DevelopingState Comptroller publishes special follow-up report on Israeli public service quality
- StrongState Comptroller report reveals severe failures in handling October 7 terrorists and security prisoners
- DevelopingNational Insurance data shows 35,625 lost residency in 2025, far below inflated media reports
Source and signal
A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.
- Internal intake
