In the wake of the allocation of billions to failing businesses, Israeli PM Bibi Netanyahu aroused fierce opposition with an announcement that all Israelis were to receive a stimulus package that will cost Israel $1.75 billion. Singles were to receive $218 and couples with three children or more $875.

Treasury officials criticized its inclusion of the well-to-do, with director Keren Terner Eyal comparing it to “throwing suitcases of money that we don’t have into the sea,” and MK Moshe Gafni said the plan was discriminatory to chareidim, as it offered their large families not a penny less than families with three children.

Channel 13 tried to even the odds by starting a crowdfunding campaign in which 5,633 Israelis donated $800,000 of their future benefits from the scheme to the poor and hungry.

The plan was subsequently adjusted to exclude people earning over $186,000 per annum, and needy people were slated for larger grants.

Meanwhile, $15.4 million earmarked for 23 NGOs that help the needy was delayed by Finance Minister Yisroel Katz after activists said some would go to groups that help African infiltrators escape deportation.

Degel Hatorah and various government bodies have also begun a $64,000 “Security and Welfare” pilot program in Ramot, Yerushalayim, that will synchronize welfare and medical services to curtail the disease and provide basic services for the ill and their relatives with emphasis on weak populations.