In its first 25 years, the Israeli economy achieved a striking average GDP growth rate of close to about 10 percent annually, while at the same time absorbing waves of mass immigration, building a modern infrastructure and economy almost from scratch, fighting four wars, and maintaining security. This was considered to be 'an economic miracle.' In actual fact, it should be ascribed largely to the resourceful use of substantial capital imports over the years - first and foremost, the mass investment in means of production - coupled with the country's success in rapidly and productively absorbing immigrants.
During the following six years, however, between 1973 and 1979, the growth rate decreased (as in most industrialized countries, partly due to the oil crises of 1973/4 and 1979/80) to a yearly average of 3.8 percent. In the 1980s, it dwindled further to 3.1 percent. Then, the 1990s saw an average annual growth rate of more than 5 percent in the GDP (even reaching 7.7 percent in 2000) and back to 5.2 percent in the mid 2000’s.
The economic growth rate in Israel in 2006 was relatively high compared with the growth rate in other developed countries. The average growth of the GDP in the 30 OECD countries totaled 3.2% in 2006 and was 1.9% lower than the growth rate in Israel.
Of course, such growth rates were impossible to achieve during the global recession, but Israel was one of the few developed economies to achieve positive growth (0.7 percent) in 2009. As the global economy began to recover, statistics indicated that growth rates were getting back to normal around 3 percent in early 2010.
The GDP per capita grew by more than 60 percent in the course of the last decade of the 20th century, reaching an annual level of close to $25,800 in 2007 and $27,143 in 2008.