Supply issues lead to surging prices for agricultural produce in Israel
date:Aug 26, 2016
s much as they like explains Midan Klop, a young farmer from the Arava valley region who grows tomatoes, watermelons, melons, and squash. The supermarket chains prefer goods from the Gaza strip or Turkey because it is cheaper. The result is that the cost of growing and delivering the locally grown produce are higher than the price the supermarkets pay for it.

Driving the governments policies is the goal of lowering prices for consumers by allowing a free market for agricultural imports. Though
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