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Decades of Compounding: The $5.4 Billion Georgia-Israel Trade Corridor

Decades of Compounding: The $5.4 Billion Georgia-Israel Trade Corridor

Cumulative exports between Georgia and Israel have reached $5.4 billion since 1996, cementing a three-decade economic partnership that now ranks the state tenth in U.S. trade with the nation. A new report from AI communications firm 5W details how this institutional infrastructure has evolved from 1992 origins into a modern tech gateway.

The research, titled Israeli Tech in Georgia 2026, highlights a relationship that prioritizes long-term compounding over rapid, short-lived growth. While many state-level economic ties are recent, Georgia’s engagement began in 1994 with the opening of a state trade office in Israel, a move that preceded similar efforts in most peer states by over a decade. Today, more than 50 Israeli-affiliated companies operate in the region, supported by a specialized ecosystem of defense contractors and corporate giants.

This economic corridor functions through three distinct pillars. First, a defense and intelligence network anchored by Robins Air Force Base draws on contractors like Northrop Grumman and HP. Second, a corporate gateway facilitates innovation through partnerships such as Coca-Cola’s Bridge accelerator and Southern Company’s R&D collaboration with the Israel Innovation Authority. Finally, institutional stability—bolstered by the long-running Conexx business alliance and the newly formed Georgia Israel Business Alliance—provides a framework for continued investment. According to 5W founder Ronn Torossian, the durability of this relationship stems from the deliberate, multi-generational effort to build a bridge between Atlanta and Tel Aviv, an initiative now transitioning from legacy platforms to the next generation of trade builders.

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