• Israel has more start-up companies per capita than anywhere else (2015)
• 70 Israeli companies have been publicly traded on NASDAQ (more than Europe, Japan, Korea and China combined)
• 300 multinational companies have established R&D centers in Israel
• Israel absorbed almost 1.2 million immigrants in a decade, augmenting the country's civilian labor force, from 1.65 million in 1990 to 3 million in 2010.
• In 2010 Israel announced the discovery of a huge natural gas field in its coastal waters, raising the prospect that the country may be able to reduce its dependence on energy imports and even become a gas exporter.
• Foreign debt was eliminated, from being 1.6 times the GDP in 1985, still 25% of the GDP in 1995, declining to less than 3% in 2001, and down to zero by 2003 - with Israel since then becoming a creditor (i.e., the world economy owes it much more than Israel owes the world). By 2010 the world owed Israel a net total of $50 billion.
• Inflation was defeated, from an annual rate of 445% in 1984 to 21% in 1989, 0% in 2000 - rising only to 2.4% in 2005 and to less than zero - 0.1% in 2006. This achievement allowed the central bank to lower interest rates to near zero during the financial crisis of 2007-2010 - while still keeping inflation within the target 3-5% range.
• Industrial exports grew almost six-fold in the past two decades, from $6 billion in 1985 to $39.8 billion in 2008 and $34.6 billion in 2009.
• Foreign investments rose steadily, encouraging the GDP and accelerating growth of exports from $175 million in 1987 to $5.8 billion in 1997, to $10.7 billion in 2005, and $16.9 billion in 2009.
• The year 2000 was the first ever in the country's economic history with both a zero inflation rate and a significant decrease of the balance of trade deficit, the latter declining further to less than $1 billion in 2009, representing less than 1 percent of total trade.