Informing
Policy
for Progress

How many Israelis would choose to live in a country where overcrowding permeates all areas of life, open spaces are in short supply, and large parts of the population live in towers that suffer from maintenance problems and take hours to get to work? How many Israelis are prepared to live in a country where infrastructure is on the verge of collapse and the construction of schools lagging behind the number of children? There is such a place in the world, or rather such a place is emerging. This is the State of Israel, 2048.

The way to deal with this issue is, on the one hand, to reduce fertility and on the other hand, to increase the area, which is already limited, by building artificial islands and exploiting the subsoil.