Benchmark Drilldown · Updated 2026-05-04
Israel Governance Model
Israel's AI governance model can be summarised as: Soft law + sector self-regulation, no horizontal legislation.
- Governance model
- Soft law + sector self-regulation, no horizontal legislation
- Strategy year
- 2021
- Region
- Israel
説明を展開
Israel's AI governance is the most laissez-faire model in this benchmark set: (1) no horizontal AI legislation; (2) the 2023 "AI Policy on Regulation and Ethics" doc establishes a sector-by-sector self-regulation principle, leaving Bank of Israel, healthcare ministries, etc. to publish their own guidance; (3) political instability (multiple cabinet turnovers since 2022) has prevented a coherent push toward statutory AI rules. Assessment: Israel's governance is closest to the US "sectoral regulators + executive orders" pattern rather than Singapore's framework-led toolised approach. The upside is zero compliance friction for AI startups — likely a contributor to Israel's startup density advantage. The downside is that for cross-border AI services aimed at EU customers, Israeli firms increasingly need to layer EU AI Act compliance on top, paying twice.
参考出典
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Region overview
Israel Core Strategy
Israel's core AI strategy is National AI Program, with the public year marked as 2021.
Region overview
Israel Investment Scale
Israel's AI investment signal is: NIS 5.26B (~$1.48B) but only 20% spent.
Region overview
Israel Core Strength
Israel's comparative strength versus Singapore is: Highest startup density globally, Unit 8200 talent pipeline.
Core strategy
National AI Program
NIS 5.26 billion five-year plan covering compute, talent and R&D
Core strategy
AI Policy on Regulation & Ethics
Regulatory framework relying primarily on industry self-regulation
Investment and resources
National AI Program Budget
NIS 5.26 billion (~US$1.48 billion) — Five-year programme; only US$281 million actually spent (~20%)
データの説明
Curated benchmark drilldown profile, last updated 2026-05-04.