A war economy can never sustain a war indefinitely, unless the fake nation is built on it. Such is the case with Israel, which is continuing on a war footing, no matter what the costs, even if it means record migration out of the Occupied Territories.
Israel's reverse migration began years ago when the judicial reforms took place, and even before that through the different wars on the Gaza Strip. But with no end in sight when it comes to Israel's wars, the economy is suffering.
The numbers are grim, and it points to a harsh reality for the Israeli regime. In 2023, 82,700 left the Occupied Territories, compared with 55,300 in 2022 and 37,000 in 2021. Percentage wise, for 2022 it's a 46% increase over the previous year, and for the year 2023, a nearly 50% rise. Between 2020 and 2024, roughly 145,000 Israelis left the occupied territories, marking what experts call the largest migration wave in Israel's modern history.