In the early years of the kibbutz, virtually all activity was centred on agriculture. In the last few decades new sources of revenue have been added. Today the economy is based on
agriculture,
manufacturing, and
tourism. Agricultural branches include
produce and
livestock, with an emphasis on
dairy farming,
poultry (
turkey and
chicken coops),
date farming,
fish farming,
orchards, and
vegetable farming. Shluhot also has a
carrot processing factory. In 2007, a cow from the dairy farm broke the Israeli record for most births, 14. One of the oldest kibbutz factories is
Microvue which produces
microfilm readers/scanners, mostly for export. Microvue is one of the few microfilm reader manufacturers left in the world.
Sheletron, founded in 1996, produces electronic display solutions through text, pictures, video, and animation on LCD screens. In the early nineties, the kibbutz renovated a residential apartment building and turned it into a
bed and breakfast, mainly geared for the
Orthodox Jewish market. The kibbutz has since added a wider variety of accommodations, ranging from single rooms to multiple-room housing units. In 1996, former
immigrants (
olim) from
North America founded a
summer camp called
Kayitz Bakibbutz, (in Hebrew "Summer on the kibbutz"), based on the typical 'American' sleepaway
summer camp experience geared toward youth. The kibbutz also has a
metalwork shop that designs and produces machines for agricultural use. ==References==