Papaya Global, a Tel Aviv-based global payroll and payment management platform unicorn, declared on Thursday that it plans to withdraw all of its funds from Israel in protest of the emerging contentious judicial overhaul.

In a post on Twitter, Papaya co-founder and CEO Eynat Guez wrote that following Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statements about the government’s determination to alter the judicial system, which she says will threaten the country’s democracy and harm its economy, Papaya has decided “to withdraw all of the company’s funds from Israel.”

“There is no certainty that we can conduct international economic activity from Israel,” Guez wrote. “This is a painful but necessary business step.”

Guez did not elaborate on what the decision means and how it will be put into practice in terms of Papaya’s day-to-day operations, and whether the move will affect its employees in Israel or where the company pays its taxes.

In recent weeks, senior executives from Israel’s business and tech community have taken to the streets to publicly voice their concern over the judicial overhaul advanced by Justice Minister Yariv Levin, which would severely limit the High Court’s ability to strike down laws and allow the Knesset to re-enact legislation that the court has struck down. It would also give Netanyahu’s coalition government control over judges’ appointments and allow ministers to appoint their own legal advisers.

Israeli entrepreneurs Guez, Ruben Drong, and Ofer Herman founded Papaya in 2016, and developed a workforce and payment management software platform geared toward different forms of employment including those on payroll, contractor work, and third-party recruiting and payment. The company employs more than 700 people around the world and has more than $3 billion in total payroll under management.

In 2021, Papaya raised $250 million in a fresh funding round, sending its valuation soaring to $3.7 billion. Papaya says its services are used in over 140 countries, and that it has seen revenue growth of over 300% year-over-year for the past three years. Among its clients are Intel, Microsoft, Toyota, and Wix.

Herzliya-based Disruptive AI, an Israeli venture capital fund that invests in early-stage AI startups, is also to pull its funds from Israel and move its bank account out of the country, according to Hebrew media reports.

Speaking out publicly against the judicial makeover, Guez told protesters in Tel Aviv last weekend that foreign investment in Israeli companies is a key ingredient to the local tech sector’s success, and will be threatened if democracy crumbles.

Citing $54 billion as the amount of foreign money invested in Israel in the last three years, Guez said that the government’s quest to quash court independence and power may threaten continued interest from investors.

“Without democracy, that $54 billion won’t be here and the tens of thousands of workers who joined high tech won’t be here,” Guez said. “No wealth holder will put money in a state where democracy is crumbling.”

“The startup nation can’t exist without democracy,” she added.

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Tel Aviv-based payroll giant Papaya Global says it’s taking its money out of Israel

16 4 24
26.01.2023

Papaya Global, a Tel Aviv-based global payroll and payment management platform unicorn, declared on Thursday that it plans to withdraw all of its funds from Israel in protest of the emerging contentious judicial overhaul.

In a post on Twitter, Papaya co-founder and CEO Eynat Guez wrote that following Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statements about the government’s determination to alter the judicial system, which she says will threaten the country’s democracy and harm its economy, Papaya has decided “to withdraw all of the company’s funds from Israel.”

“There is no certainty that we can conduct international economic activity from Israel,” Guez wrote. “This is a painful but necessary business step.”

Guez did not elaborate on what the decision means and how it will be put into practice in terms of Papaya’s day-to-day operations, and whether the move will affect its employees in Israel or where the company pays its taxes.

In recent weeks, senior executives from Israel’s business and tech community have........

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