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COUNTRY REPORT
Switzerland
3rd quarter 1996
The Economist Intelligence Unit
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ISSN 0269-6169
Summary
Switzerland 3rd quarter 1996
August 30, 1996
Political and economic structures pages 2-3
Outlook: Growing public unease may lead to protests but employers will keep
the upper hand. Voters� nervousness will slow progress on EU bilateral talks.
Wide-ranging reform and liberalisation is planned. The recovery, led by exports,
will be feeble and unemployment will rise. The franc will provide no respite for
exporters to Europe. Tourism income will be weak but the current account will
remain strong. pages 4-8
The political scene: EU talks are dragging but a vote on EU and EEA member-
ship is possible in 1998. A cheese scandal has been uncovered. Swiss beef is still
banned by some countries. Forced repatriation of Bosnians has been postponed.
Heavier regulation of IVF practices is likely. A new sex equality law has come
into force. pages 8-12
Economic policy: Revenue is running lower than budgeted and cutbacks will
hit the public sector and the unemployed. The cartel law has come into force.
There is resistance to the liberal labour law. Funding for social security and
sickness insurance is causing disquiet. Energy is to be liberalised and reforms of
rail are planned. Expansionary monetary policy continues. pages 12-19
The economy: Private consumption has been stagnant and capital equipment
growth has slowed, but export growth has been better than expected. The
inflation rate has fallen, but unemployment has gone up. pages 19-23
Foreign trade and payments: Export and import values have increased and
the services surplus has risen, although tourism income has dropped sharply.
The franc eased but then rebounded in July. pages 23-25
Financial news: Large-scale restructuring is due for the big banks. The elec-
tronic bourse is on stream. Money-laundering rules are to be tightened again. A
deeper investigation into Holocaust victims� accounts is under way.
pages 25-28
Business news: Power firms are to offer a telephone service. Von Roll has sold
its steelmaking to von Moos. Swissair has bought into duty-free businesses and
casinos and has antitrust immunity for a multi-company marketing alliance.
Klaus Jacobs has extended his chocolate empire. ABB has encountered problems
with its Malaysian dam project. pages 28-31
Statistical appendices pages 32-34
Editor:
All queries:
Fiona Mullen
Tel: (44.171) 830 1007 Fax: (44.171) 830 1023
Switzerland 1
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Political structure
Official name: Swiss Confederation
Form of state: federal republic
Legal system: based on constitution of 1874
National legislature: bicameral Federal Assembly (parliament), comprising the National Council and Council
of States. National Council of 200 members directly elected by proportional representation using the
Hagenbach-Bischoff quota, except in the smallest cantons where the single representative is elected by the
plurality (first-past-the-post) system. Council of States of 46 members representing the cantons. Any law passed
by both houses may be submitted to a referendum if demanded by eight cantons or 50,000 citizens
Electoral system: universal direct suffrage over age 18
Last federal election: October 22, 1995
Next federal election due: October 1999
Head of state: the de facto head of state is the president of the Federal Council, although constitutionally this
role is filled by the council as a whole
State legislatures: each of the 26 cantons and half-cantons has a parliament elected by universal suffrage and
a government whose organisation varies from canton to canton. In five, the principle of universal sovereignty is
exercised directly through assemblies of all voters. The cantons are sovereign in all areas not specifically
entrusted to the federal government
National government: Federal Council (the executive authority) of seven members elected for a four-year
term by, but not necessarily from, the Federal Assembly. The president and vice-president are elected for a
one-year term which is not immediately renewable. Since 1959 the Federal Council has contained two members
each of the Social Democratic Party, the Radical Democratic Party, and the Christian Democratic Party, and one
member from the Swiss People�s Party. The Federal Council was re-elected in December 1995
Main political parties: Radical Democratic Party (RDP); Social Democratic Party (SDP); Christian Democratic
Party (CDP); Swiss People�s Party (PP); Liberal Party; Ecology Party; Independent Alliance
The Federal Council
President & minister of public economy Jean-Pascal Delamuraz (RDP)
Vice-president & minister of justice & police Arnold Koller (CDP)
Ministers
defence Adolf Ogi (PP) finance Kaspar Villiger (RDP)
foreign affairs Flavio Cotti (CDP) interior & environment Ruth Dreifuss (SDP) transport, communications & energy Moritz Leuenberger (SDP)
Central bank president Hans Meyer
2 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Economic structure
Latest available figures
Economic indicators 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995
GDP at market prices Swfr bn 331.1 338.8 342.9 351.9 359.4
Real GDP growth % 0.0 �0.3 �0.8 1.2 0.7
Consumer price inflation % 5.9 4.0 3.3 0.9 1.8
Population m (mid-year) 6.79 6.90 6.94 6.99 7.04
Exportsa fob $ bn 74.3 79.9 75.4 82.6 93.6b
Importsa fob $ bn 78.9 80.2 73.9 79.3 92.3b
Current accounta $ bn 10.4 14.2 17.8 18.5 19.9b
Reserves excl gold $ bn (Dec) 29.0 33.3 32.6 34.7 36.4
Gross public debtc % of GDP 33.7 38.3 43.7 46.4 48.0
Exchange rate (av) Swfr:$ 1.43 1.41 1.48 1.37 1.18
August 30, 1996 Swfr1.20:$1; Swfr0.81:DM1
Origins of gross domestic product 1990d % of total Components of gross domestic product 1994 % of total
Agriculture 3.1 Private consumption 58.8
Industry 26.3 Government consumption 14.3
Construction 8.4 Fixed investment 22.8
Services 62.2 Stockbuilding �0.6
Total at factor cost 100.0 Exports of goods & services 36.2
Imports of goods & services �31.5
Total 100.0
Principal exports 1995 $ m Principal imports 1995 $ m
Machinery 23,217 Machinery 17,350
Chemicals 19,988 Chemicals 11,002
Precision instruments, watches & jewellery 12,665 Vehicles 8,983
Metals & metal manufactures 7,073 Metals & metal manufactures 7,553
Textiles, clothing & shoes 3,350 Agriculture, forestry products & fish 6,839
Total incl others 77,976 Textiles, clothing & shoes 6,710
Precision instruments, watches & jewellery 4,743
Total incl others 76,928
Main destinations of exports 1995 % of total Main origins of imports 1995 % of total
EU-15 62.6 EU-15 80.8
Germany 24.5 Germany 34.8
France 9.7 France 11.7
Italy 7.8 Italy 10.5
UK 5.2 UK 4.4
USA 8.4 USA 5.8
Japan 3.9 Japan 3.3
EFTA4 0.6 EFTA4 0.4
a IMF source; not comparable with some national sources. b EIU estimate. c National definitions. d OECD figures. Switzerland does not publish
figures on GDP by origin.
Switzerland 3
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Outlook
Unease may lead to
protest�
Although Switzerland remains one of the strongest economies in the world, two
lean years of slow growth, rising unemployment and wide-scale restructuring
have made the Swiss increasingly nervous about their future. Companies are
now asking workers to accept cuts in wages in further efforts to increase compet-
itiveness, but it appears that Swiss workers have had enough. While it is true
that, notwithstanding their high levels of productivity, Swiss workers are among
the highest paid in the world, companies� efforts to claw back in this way profit
margins lost to the strong franc are beginning to meet with resistance, even
from government (see The political scene).
However, although there will be protests, they are unlikely to lead to strikes,
which are rare in Switzerland. Also, as workers may be faced with the chance of
pay cuts or no job at all, in general employers will have the upper hand.
�and further delay to EU
bilateral talks
Another manifestation of voters� unease is that they are more likely than ever
to resist pressure to open up Swiss markets to the EU. The government will
continue to argue that integration with the EU is in Switzerland�s best interests,
but persuading the electorate will take a long time. Thus, the bilateral talks
with the EU are unlikely to be formally over, with referendum and parlia-
mentary approval, until after 1997.
Fiscal tightening will
target expenditure�
The federal deficit in 1996 is threatening to exceed the budgeted Swfr4bn
($3.4bn), about 1.1% of GDP. This is particularly alarming for the authorities in
view of the fact that in 1994 and 1995 the government did succeed in pushing
the deficit below budget. A sluggish economy has dampened revenue, while
higher unemployment in the first half of the year, compared with the year-
earlier period, has pushed up unemployment payments. Fiscal policy will
therefore be tightened over the next two years and the finance minister, Kaspar
Villiger, is already seeking an immediate Swfr1.6bn cut in spending in 1996.
Federal expenditure is likely to be the principal target for immediate cuts and
there will probably be restrictions on pay rises and staff reductions in the public
sector. The unemployed will also be affected, as the five-day delay before a
person can collect benefit is likely to be extended.
�and reforms to the
public sector and social
security
The lower house of parliament, the National Council, has called for a balanced
budget by 2000, one year earlier than planned. The government has already
embarked on a programme to keep expenditure down in the long term.
Agricultural subsidies will be reduced; funding for social security will be
increased through a possible mixture of value-added tax (VAT), energy taxes
and increased contributions; the retirement age for women may be raised to 65;
and Swiss Railways is to be restructured (see Economic policy).
Recovery will be feeble� The current stagnation of the Swiss economy reflects the continuing strength
of the franc and the difficult situation in the important construction industry.
Slow growth in Europe, Switzerland�s biggest export market, has also been an
important factor, as have efforts by federal and local government to put their
finances in order. The conditions for a recovery towards the end of 1996 are
4 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
present but as of mid-summer there was little tangible sign of a pick-up in
activity.
Forecast summary
(% change year on year unless otherwise indicated)
1994a 1995a 1996b 1997b
Real GDP 1.2 0.7 0.7 1.3
Industrial production 7.7 2.9 3.5 4.0
Consumer prices 0.9 1.8 0.8 1.6
Unemployment ratec (%) 3.6 3.2 3.5 3.5
3-month money-market rate (%) 4.04 2.95 2.30 3.10
Current accounte ($ bn) 18.5 19.9d 19.8 20.1
% of GDP 7.2 6.5 6.7 6.6
Average exchange rates
Swfr:DM 0.84 0.82 0.81 0.82
Swfr:$ 1.37 1.18 1.23 1.24
a Actual. b EIU forecasts. c OECD standardised rate. d EIU estimate. e IMF source; not comparable
with some national sources.
�despite recovery in the
world economy�
On the positive side, the world economy is gathering pace. The US economy is
buoyant, a recovery is under way in Japan, and there are now indications of
faster growth in Europe, including Germany, which is Switzerland�s single big-
gest export customer. Domestic inflation is very low, amounting to virtual price
stability, and there are no inflationary pressures on the horizon. An easing of the
Swiss franc would tend to push up import prices but a substantial decline in the
value of the currency looks unlikely in view of the franc�s still potent status as a
haven from uncertainty and instability elsewhere. The inflation rate is expected
to average 0.8% or less this year and 1.6% in 1997.
�and low interest rates Interest rates too are very low, despite an upturn earlier in the year when the
franc briefly declined on international exchanges. Barring a steep fall in the
exchange rate, which the EIU considers highly unlikely, the Swiss National
Bank (SNB, the central bank) is expected to maintain its accommodating
monetary policy which has led to a sharp rise in its target measure of money
supply so far this year.
On the negative side, European growth may be slowed by the need for many
countries to pursue restrictive fiscal policies in order to qualify for Economic and
Monetary Union. In addition, after a welcome spring decline in the value of the
Swiss franc against the dollar, the exchange rate has more recently rebounded to
previous overvalued levels, putting renewed pressure on exports and damaging
competitiveness. The construction sector continues to be a drag on the Swiss
economy, with no respite in sight. Meanwhile, consumer confidence has
plunged to its lowest level for two-and-a-half years, ensuring that household
spending will remain restrained over the foreseeable future.
The government will try
to help through
liberalisation
The Swiss government has already announced that it does not intend to adopt
stimulatory measures, as urged by the coalition parties. If no growth is forth-
coming in the second half of the year, it will consider bringing forward certain
transport investments, notably those related to the transalpine rail tunnel pro-
ject. However, the growing budget deficit is putting pressure on the government
Switzerland 5
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
to make expenditure restraint a priority, so the speeding up of such investment
projects is by no means guaranteed. The government�s main way of aiding the
economy will be by liberalisation of cartels, labour laws, agriculture, pharma-
ceuticals and energy. Lower company taxes are also in prospect (see Economic
policy).
The recovery will be led
by exports�
Switzerland will once again trail at the bottom of the west European league table
in terms of real GDP growth rates. The recovery will be led by exports, which
have remained remarkably buoyant despite the strong franc and weak growth in
Europe and should profit from improvements in both. Better than expected
growth in exports has led us to revise up our GDP growth forecast slightly, to
0.7% in 1996 and 1.3% in 1997. Domestic demand will also increase, propelled
mainly by a high level of investment spending on plant and equipment.
Consumer spending will rise feebly as households continue to be worried about
jobs and income security. These fears have been exacerbated by recent
announcements of wage cuts in the public sector and big job losses in a series of
mergers and company cutbacks (see Economic policy). Although real incomes
are expected to rise by about 1% this year and next, the gains will be eroded by
higher health insurance premiums. Savings will remain high.
A 15% annual drop in new construction orders in the first quarter, and an 11%
fall in building permits issued, point to a continued fall in construction invest-
ment this year and into next. Vacant residential and commercial property still
overhangs the market and little stimulus is likely from the public sector. The
decline in construction may be more pronounced in the German-speaking
part of the country where the industry has so far suffered less than in French-
speaking areas.
�but unemployment will
remain high by historical
standards
Most investment spending will continue to be aimed at rationalisation and
efficiency gains designed to improve productivity. Coupled with slow
economic growth, this means that employment will rise only slightly next year
and unemployment remain high by historical standards. Small and medium-
sized companies, which dominate the Swiss economy, have fallen behind the
big multinationals in restructuring their activities to take account of the strong
franc and other competitive pressures. Surveys suggest that this sector expects
to shed many more jobs this year after delaying hard decisions in the hope of
an early economic recovery. We expect the unemployment rate, on OECD
standardised definitions, to rise to 3.5% in 1996-97. On national definitions,
the rate is likely to be in the region of 4.6%.
Small firms are feeling the full force of the strong Swiss franc as they have little
opportunity for production outside Switzerland. They are also at a disadvan-
tage because Switzerland is not a member of the EU. Switzerland�s big com-
panies have already restructured or are in the process of doing so (see Financial
news and Business news), shifting both production and sourcing abroad. This
in turn has put additional pressure on small Swiss-based suppliers. Industry
surveys show clearly that, for both goods and services, sectors dominated by
international firms have done far better than those where small firms are
concentrated. In services, for instance, banks and insurance companies have
6 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
posted good results in the past year or so, while hotels, restaurants and shops
have suffered.
No respite for exporters to
Europe
Exporters to Europe are not expected to be given a respite from the strong Swiss
franc. While doubts about EU countries� credentials for a single currency con-
tinue to be expressed, the Swiss franc will continue to be used as a safe haven for
investment and be vulnerable to appreciation on financial markets. The SNB�s
looser monetary policy will offset this a little, but the exchange rate against the
D-mark is expected to remain at an average Swfr0.82:DM1 in 1996-97, some
2.4% higher in value than in 1994. Exports to markets more closely related to
the dollar, however, will benefit from the dollar�s appreciation this year.
Tourism income will be
weak
The current account will be kept high by rising surpluses on services and invest-
ment income. Except for net transfers, all components of the current account
will remain in surplus, although the trade balance will approach deficit, as is
usual for Switzerland, by 1997. However, as a ratio of GDP, the surpluses on
invisibles and current account, although rising, will not be as high in 1996-97 as
in 1993-94, owing to weak net tourism income.
Economic results and forecasts
(Swfr bn at constant 1980 prices; % change year on year in brackets unless otherwise indicated)
1994a 1995a 1996b 1997b
Private consumption 128.5 128.8 129.6 131.2
(1.0) (0.2) (0.6) (1.2)
Public consumption 30.0 30.0 29.9 29.9
(0.8) (�0.1) (�0.2) (�0.1)
Gross fixed investment 59.5 62.7 64.1 67.0
(5.9) (5.3) (2.3) (4.5)
Final domestic demand 218.1 221.5 223.6 228.1
(2.2) (1.6) (1.0) (2.0)
Stockbuilding 0.3 2.2 1.3 1.4
(1.5)c (0.9)c (�0.5)c (0.1)c
Total domestic demand 218.4 223.7 224.9 229.5
(3.8) (2.5) (0.5) (2.0)
Foreign balance �8.8 �12.7 �12.4 �14.2
(�2.6)c (�1.8)c (0.1)c (�0.8)c
GDP 209.6 211.1 212.5 215.3
(1.2) (0.7) (0.7) (1.3)
Exports of goods & services 93.4 96.0 99.6 104.0
(3.3) (2.8) (3.8) (4.4)
Imports of goods & services 102.2 108.7 112.0 118.2
(9.0) (6.4) (3.1) (5.5)
a Actual. b EIU forecasts. c Change as a percentage of GDP in the previous year.
Switzerland 7
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Review
The political scene
Bilateral negotiations
with Brussels drag on
The Swiss government has become increasingly impatient with the slow pace of
bilateral talks with Brussels. Despite the adoption by Switzerland in April of a
more flexible negotiating position (2nd quarter 1996, pages 8-9), the discussions
have dragged on with little apparent progress and no firm date for their con-
clusion. EU officials have indicated that the end of this year could be realistic,
but this is not a target or deadline as the Swiss had hoped. In July EU foreign
ministers said only that progress had been made in the negotiations and called
for an agreement to be reached �as soon as possible�.
The bilateral talks, begun in December 1994 at Switzerland�s instigation, are
intended to ameliorate some of the disadvantages to Switzerland of the rejection
by Swiss voters in 1992 of membership of the European Economic Area (EEA)
which links the EU and three European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries.
The negotiations cover seven topics: air and road transport, agriculture,
research, technical barriers to trade, government procurement and the free
movement of people.
The Swiss reject free
movement of persons�
The free movement of people, the most sensitive issue for Switzerland, remains
the main sticking-point. Brussels continues to insist on an agreed timetable for
scrapping Switzerland�s work permit quotas (although it is prepared to concede
a safeguard clause allowing the Swiss to reimpose immigration controls if there
is an unexpected influx of foreigners). However, Switzerland has refused to
concede the principle of free circulation. It has offered only to improve the lot
of the 800,000 EU citizens already living in Switzerland and to return to the
free circulation issue in five years� time.
�and insist on Alpine
freight taxes
On road transport, another difficult area for Switzerland, Brussels says that
Swiss road taxes designed to discourage transit freight traffic should be based
on costs and should not be out of line with taxes in neighbouring EU countries
-1.0
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
1993 94 95 96(a) 97(a)
Switzerland
EU
Gross domestic product % change on previous year
(a) EIU forecast. (b) Nominal exchange rates adjusted for changes
in relative consumer prices.Sources: EIU; IMF, International Financial Statistics.
70
80
90
100
110
120
1990 91 92 93 94 95 96(a) 97(a)
Swiss franc: real exchange rate (b)1990=100
Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥Swfr:¥
Swfr:DMSwfr:DMSwfr:DM
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥Swfr:¥
Swfr:DMSwfr:DMSwfr:DM
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:$
Swfr:¥
Swfr:DM
8 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
such as Austria and France. In April the Swiss government said it would be
prepared to relax its 28-ton lorry weight limit progressively to 34 tons in 2001
and 40 tons in 2005, provided lorry taxes were raised by both sides to reflect
costs. To comply with a 1994 vote to force transit freight crossing the Alps to
switch to rail, Switzerland has reserved the right to impose a surcharge on
lorries for using its four Alpine passes: Gotthard, San Bernadino, Simplon and
Grand-Saint-Bernard.
In July the European Commission itself proposed changes in the taxation of
heavy goods vehicles to reflect costs, including a possible surcharge for the use
of �sensitive routes�. However, while the principles of the scheme closely
match Swiss plans, they have yet to be accepted by EU ministers and there is no
certainty that the costings will be the same.
In addition, Austria, France, Germany and the Netherlands want an immediate
concession from Switzerland to allow transport of goods using heavier trucks to
the main population centres. The Swiss government says this is out of the
question, a view reinforced by the decision of several environmental groups to
form a referendum committee to challenge any relaxation of the 28-ton limit.
Switzerland wants �fifth
freedom� air rights
Switzerland is also disappointed with the EU position on air transport. Brussels
is offering little more than bilateral traffic rights rather than fifth freedom
rights, which would allow Swiss airlines to fly onward connections within the
EU for flights originating in Switzerland: Geneva-Milan-Rome, for example.
The Swiss say the EU offer is ungenerous in view of the planned �open skies�
policy in Europe next year. Brussels retorts that reciprocal rights in Switzerland
would not be worth a great deal to EU airlines.
A pro-European initiative
will be put to a vote
A people�s initiative to begin immediate talks on EU membership has obtained
the required 100,000 signatures. The Federal Council (Switzerland�s executive
ruling body) now has two years to take a position on the initiative and it could
be put to a vote in 1998. Two other initiatives on Europe, one demanding a
second vote on the EEA and the other requiring a referendum to approve any
talks with Brussels on joining the EU, have already secured the requisite signa-
tures, but a referendum date has yet to be fixed.
Government reform plans
are rejected by voters�
Proposals to lighten the load on government ministers by creating a second-tier
of ten state secretaries to assist them were rejected by 61% of voters in a referen-
dum in June. The turnout was 31%. The proposals were backed by a majority of
French- and Italian-speakers but decisively thrown out by German-speakers,
who are traditionally more suspicious of the federal government. The Federal
Council must now decide whether to proceed with an attenuated reform
programme or accelerate more ambitious plans already under consideration for
a thorough shake-up of the federal administration. Switzerland has by far the
fewest ministries in western Europe�seven compared with Austria�s 15,
Germany�s 18 and France�s 24. The number has not changed since 1848, despite
the huge increase in the workload.
German 63.6
French 19.2
Italian 7.6Romansch 0.6
Other 8.9
Resident population by first language% of total, 1990 census
Source: Département fédéral de l'économie publique, La Vieéconomique.
Switzerland 9
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
�but constitutional
amendment on
agriculture is accepted�
On the same day, a proposed constitutional amendment on agriculture was
accepted by 78% of voters, following rejection of an earlier amendment in
March 1995. Last year�s refusal stemmed from concerns that industrial farming
was unduly favoured. The approved amendment, by contrast, anchors in the
constitution the principle that direct payments to farmers can be made only for
environmental reasons. It also stipulates a �multi-functional� agricultural sector
responsible for feeding the population, protecting the environment and main-
taining rural communities.
�and more agricultural
reforms on the way�
Later in June, the Federal Council approved a second tranche of agricultural
reforms designed to make the sector more market-oriented and environmentally
sensitive. The programme, dubbed �Agriculture 2002", sets out a detailed plan of
implementation for the seven years to 2002. In the important dairy sector, the
price of milk will no longer be guaranteed, although border protection will
continue. The government will continue to support butter- and cheese-making.
However, it will stop subsidies for cheese exports to the EU, while maintaining
export subsidies for other markets. There will also be reductions in support for
wheat.
�which will benefit
consumers
Consumers will be the main beneficiaries, saving Swfr1.4bn ($1.1bn) over the
seven years in lower prices for food in the shops. The federal government will
save Swfr530m ($431m) in price guarantees over the period but will pay out
Swfr1.2bn more in direct payments to farmers. However, these payments will
only partly compensate farmers for the loss of Swfr1.9bn in price supports. The
government is hoping that the deficiency of Swfr700m left in their finances will
be eliminated by lower costs of production. To that end, it plans to introduce a
subsidy for farm investment and to change existing inflexible laws on farm
property and rents. Switzerland subsidises its farmers more generously than
almost any other OECD country, paying out $6.1bn in 1995, amounting to 81%
of the value of production.
A cheese scandal is
uncovered
The Swiss government has nominated a former federal prosecutor, Hans Walder,
to investigate alleged corruption in the Swiss Cheese Union, a semi-government
agency responsible for buying in and marketing Emmental, Gruyère and Sbrinz.
The administrative inquiry will run parallel to the criminal investigation already
under way, which has resulted in the arrest and brief detention of the former
marketing director of the Swiss Cheese Union, Walter Rüegg. The allegations
relate to abuse of the system under which the EU charges duty on Swiss cheese
sold below a minimum level set by Brussels. To help in offloading stocks, the
Swiss Cheese Union is said to have paid some Swfr26m to an Italian cheese firm,
allowing it to buy cheese at prices below the minimum, with false invoices to
avoid paying tariffs. Mr Rüegg is alleged to have received gifts of at least
Swfr350,000 in connection with the affair. Italy is Switzerland�s biggest cheese
importer, taking nearly 40% of Swiss exports of Emmental, Gruyère and Sbrinz
last year.
Swiss officials have raised the prospect that as much as Swfr200m might have to
be paid to the EU in restitution and fines. The scandal is also likely to hasten the
demise of the Swiss Cheese Union, now renamed Swiss Cheese, whose future
was already in doubt because of plans to dismantle the comprehensive system of
10 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
dairy price supports. Subsidies for marketing the three above-mentioned hard
cheeses, which together account for two-thirds of Swiss cheese production, will
amount to more than Swfr450m this year. Over the past decade, exports of Swiss
cheese sold at normal prices have tumbled, while cut-price sales now account for
nearly one-quarter of the total. To make matters worse, the EU has refused to
give Swiss Emmental protected status, forcing the cheese to compete with ge-
neric EU �Emmental� produced at lower cost. With less generous subsidies in
the future, Swiss farmers will have no alternative but to cut cheese production
drastically in line with what can be sold on the open market.
The boycott on Swiss beef
continues
Some 16 countries are maintaining an embargo on Swiss beef, beef products and
dairy goods such as chocolate, ice-cream and powdered milk because of fears of
�mad cow� disease (2nd quarter 1996, page 11). They include Germany and
Austria among EU countries; the others are Algeria, Turkey, Yugoslavia (Serbia-
Montenegro), Slovakia, Argentina, Syria, Ukraine, Peru, Russia, Czech Republic,
Morocco, Singapore, Tunisia and Poland. The European Commission has again
demanded that Germany and Austria lift the ban on Swiss beef imposed at the
end of March after the UK government admitted a possible link between mad
cow disease and a rare form of human brain disease. Subsequently, an EU
investigation suggested that the source of mad cow disease in Swiss cows was
infected feed from the UK. Although it concluded that the disease was under
control, the German and Austrian governments remain to be convinced.
The return of Bosnian
refugees is postponed
The Swiss government has postponed the repatriation of a first group of 8,000
Bosnian refugees, initially planned for the end of August 1996, to April 30 next
year. The decision, which concerns single people or couples without children,
is in line with similar positions taken by Austria, Sweden, Denmark and the
Netherlands. The return of Bosnian families with children, involving about
13,000 people, is still planned for August 31, 1997. So far this year, only
350 refugees have gone back voluntarily. Most of the refugees in Switzerland
are Muslims from areas now controlled by the Bosnian Serbs.
The government proposes
new controls on test-tube
babies
The Federal Council has proposed new controls on in vitro fertilisation (IVF), in
response to a people�s initiative deposited in 1994 which calls for a ban on the
practice. Surrogate mothers and the donation of embryos are already forbidden
in Switzerland. But the government plans to go further in limiting to three the
number of embryos which can be reinserted into the mother�s womb and for-
bidding the preservation of embryos for future use. The Federal Council also
proposes to ban certain techniques that may become possible in the future,
including the removal of a fertilised egg for testing for genetic anomalies before
being reimplanted, the modification of genes in sperm, eggs or embryos, and
cloning.
Donations of sperm will be permitted but not those of eggs, a discriminatory
move that may not survive parliamentary scrutiny. Children fathered by a
sperm donor will have the right to know his identity once they reach the age
of 16, but the donor will not be able to claim fatherhood rights. Assisted
procreation will be available only to heterosexual couples in a �stable�
relationship and in a position to raise the child to adulthood. A national ethics
commission will be set up to monitor the new legislation, which partly
Switzerland 11
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
implements a constitutional change on procreation and genetic engineering
approved in a 1992 referendum.
A new sex equality law
enters into force
A new law on sex equality that came into force on July 1 bans all forms of sex
discrimination including that relating to wages. Some groups of women public
employees in the canton of Zurich, including nurses and physiotherapists, have
already announced that they plan court actions to force the cantonal authorities
to put them in a higher wage bracket. However, at a national level no one is
expecting a rush of court cases of this kind. The new legislation also outlaws
sexual harassment, allows class actions by groups of women and reverses the
burden of proof in court cases so that discrimination is presumed unless the
employer can demonstrate the contrary.
A report on sex equality issued in June by the Federal Statistical Office shows
that Switzerland, like other countries, is far from granting women equal status.
Women remain concentrated in �women�s jobs� and in lower levels of the job
hierarchy. On average they earn 30% less than men, which partly reflects their
lower educational levels, a difference more marked in Switzerland than else-
where in Europe. In addition, working women spend more than 23 hours a
week on domestic tasks, while men spend just ten hours.
Economic policy
The federal deficit may
exceed the budgeted
Swfr4bn in 1996�
A shortfall in expected tax revenue in the first half of 1996 has led to fears that
the budgeted Swfr4bn ($3.4bn, or 1% of GDP) federal deficit for 1996 may be
exceeded. This would be unusual, for the government in the last two years has
managed to cut the actual deficits to less than those that had been targeted in
the budget. The recession is to blame for most of the shortfall: receipts from
federal income tax and petrol duties have been lower than expected. In addi-
tion, higher than anticipated unemployment is expected to cost �some hundred
millions� of francs, according to the Federal Finance Department. (This shows in
the federal accounts as increased lending to the unemployment insurance
fund.) Interest payments on government debt and allotments to the cantons are
also expected to be higher than budgeted. Additional expenditure approved by
the Federal Assembly (parliament), Swfr600m ($488m) in the first half of 1996,
is running at three times last year�s level.
�and the 1997 budget is
looking gloomy
Spending plans by the federal government point to a budget deficit next year of
Swfr7.5bn, or Swfr3.5bn more than the budgeted deficit for 1996. More than
half the deficit increase is attributable to changes in accounting rules: Swfr900m
in loans to the Swiss Federal Railways will be included in the government
accounts for the first time instead of being outside the budget, while the near-
Swfr1bn surplus of the Federal Pension Fund (the civil service pension fund) will
be excluded. However, the finance minister, Kaspar Villiger, says he is seeking
Swfr1.6bn in immediate cuts to limit the budget deficit next year to Swfr6bn.
One likely candidate for cuts is next year�s inflation adjustment to the pay of
federal civil servants; there could also be staff reductions. Other possibilities
include increasing the present five-day delay before the unemployed can collect
benefit and a reduction, without compensation, in milk production quotas.
12 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Central government budget
(Swfr bn unless otherwise indicated)
1993 1994 1995 1996
Outturn Outturn Budget Outturn Budget
Revenue 32.8 36.2 36.3 37.3 39.9
Expenditure �40.6 �41.3 �42.4 �40.5 44.0
Balance �7.8 �5.1 �6.1 �3.3 �4.0
% of GDP 2.3 1.4 1.7 0.9 1.1
Federal debt 69.5 75.7 � 82.2 �
% of GDP 20.3 21.5 � 22.9 �
Sources: Département fédéral des finances; Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique .
Parliament wants a
balanced budget by 2000
The National Council (lower house) has instructed Mr Villiger to achieve a
balanced budget by 2000, a year earlier than planned. The finance minister has
already protested that this is unrealistic. The Federal Finance Department has
projected deficits of Swfr7.1bn in 1997, Swfr8.6bn in 1998 and Swfr8.1bn in
1999 (partly reflecting the accounting changes noted earlier) before savings
come through on long-term reforms. These include an estimated Swfr3bn
(10%) saving on simplifying the system of financing the cantons to provide
mandatory services. The changes envisage a switch from hypothecated
grants�specific grants for specific services�to block grants that leave the
cantons free to provide the services as they see fit.
Lower company taxes are
in prospect
The government has proposed a reform of the company tax structure to benefit
holding companies and the issue of share capital by smaller enterprises. The
measures would cost the exchequer between Swfr90m and Swfr210m per year,
depending on which of two variants is chosen. Swiss company taxes are already
low by international standards, accounting for about one-third of GDP, com-
pared with the OECD average of 39%. They have been lightened twice in recent
years through the introduction of value-added tax (VAT) and a change in tax
accounting for holding companies. However, holding companies in the EU
benefit from still more favourable conditions, and since such companies are
highly mobile the Swiss government has felt obliged to match the EU�s terms.
Holding companies in Switzerland currently employ about 20,000 people. The
measures will be discussed by parliament next year and should come into force
in 1999.
A new law on cartels
comes into force
A crucial plank of the government�s economic revitalisation programme was put
in place on July 1 with the entry into force of the new law on cartels. For the first
time, cartels that fix prices or carve up the market will be banned. Existing
cartels have until January 1997 to comply with the legislation. The new Swiss
Competition Commission, which replaces the previous Cartel Commission, will
also have the power to investigate and prevent mergers. Like the EU�s merger
regulation, there are turnover thresholds for triggering an enquiry. The thres-
holds for triggering an enquiry are the creation of a company with a worldwide
turnover of Swfr2bn or more or sales in Switzerland of Swfr500m, where two or
more of the merging companies have pre-merger sales in Switzerland of at least
Swfr100m.
Two other �revitalisation� laws came into effect at the same time. The first
creates a single internal market for Switzerland, requiring the cantons to scrap
Switzerland 13
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
restrictions on the free circulation of goods and services and recognise profes-
sional qualifications granted by other cantons. The second allows the govern-
ment to minimise technical barriers to trade by relaxing excessively tight norms
and standards or harmonising them with international or European standards.
Two immediate targets are food hygiene rules and car safety tests.
A recent report on Switzerland by the World Trade Organization (WTO) said
that lack of domestic competition had resulted in a price level 50% above the
EU average. The report counted 20 cartels operating restrictions in the markets
for energy, insurance, transport and communications.
New labour laws will be
challenged in a
referendum
Trade unions, backed by the Social Democratic Party, have collected 150,000
signatures to force a referendum on the new labour law passed by parliament in
March. The vote will probably be held on December 1. The main focus of
complaint is the extension of �normal� working hours from 8pm to 11pm and
the absence of any legal requirement for employers to pay overtime or even give
compensating time off for night work and Sunday working. Compensation was
refused by the bourgeois majority (the Radical Democratic Party, the Christian
Democratic Party and the Swiss People�s Party) in parliament, against
the government�s recommendation, on the grounds that it was a matter for
collective bargaining.
Employers have welcomed the new law, arguing that it will increase the flexi-
bility of the Swiss labour market, improve competitiveness and create jobs.
Other provisions of the legislation remove restrictions on night work by
women in industry (no such restriction has ever been in force for the service
sector), enable shops to open six Sundays a year, and allow firms to operate
double shifts without special authorisation.
The trade unions are incorporating in their referendum campaign strategy a
wholesale attack on what they claim is a drive by employers to dismantle the
social welfare system and destroy the gains achieved by workers in the period
since the Second World War. Slow economic growth and rising unemployment
has meant that Swiss voters already fear for their future prosperity and in June
they were shocked by the news that Switzerland�s biggest employer, Swiss
Federal Railways, was considering pay cuts of 2-4% to help curb its massive
deficit. The next day the canton of Zurich announced that it planned to reduce
the wages of its employees by 5%; some other cities have indicated that they
may follow suit. Until now the public sector has been largely insulated from
the wage pressures already felt by workers in private industry, pressures which
have resulted in a general stagnation of real incomes over the past few years.
To add to these worries, a series of highly publicised mergers and company
cutbacks has resulted in planned job losses totalling 13,300 in the first six
months of the year, among them 3,500 at Credit Suisse (see Financial news),
1,200 at Swissair and 3,500 at the science group, Novartis. These events have
contributed to an unprecedented sense of insecurity in Switzerland; seven in
ten Swiss workers fear unemployment or wage cuts, according to an opinion
poll published in July.
In June the Federal Council (Switzerland�s executive ruling body) went so far as
to issue a statement expressing its concern about the confrontation between
14 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
trade unions and employers, arguing that �only a constructive dialogue will
permit us to find solutions to current problems�. Mr Villiger also spoke out
against generalised wage reductions, arguing that these would simply worsen
the economic situation by depressing consumption.
The main employers� groups deny there is any general intention to cut wages
or demolish social benefits. However, employers appear to be gaining the
upper hand both in their dealings with the trade unions and in restraining
social welfare provision. Several trade unions have recently been obliged to
abandon sectoral bargaining for company agreements, for example in the
chemicals industry and banking. A number of employers have cancelled and
renegotiated collective agreements. Swissair has just agreed pay cuts with its
pilots (see Business news) and unions in other industries have also accepted
wage reductions. Rules for claiming unemployment benefits have been tough-
ened and the Swiss Employers� Association, which has taken the hardest line
on social issues, has called not only for a halt to all future social security
projects but also for a review of some benefits.
Funding for social security
stirs passions
In June a government working group published its report on the future financ-
ing needs of the social security system, suggesting a worrying shortfall in future
funding. The report estimates that spending on social insurance benefits will
rise from Swfr73bn in 1995 to Swfr103bn in 2010 and Swfr124bn in 2025. This
will mean finding extra funds of Swfr30bn to finance benefits in 2010 and
Swfr51bn in 2025. However, according to the government�s assumption of
average economic growth of 1.3% per year, the financing gap in 2010 would be
about Swfr5bn, concentrated on the state pension and invalidity schemes. For
the pension scheme, this sum could be recouped either by extra contributions
equivalent to 1.9% of earnings or by increasing VAT by 2.5 percentage points.
Funding the invalidity scheme would require either an extra 1% of earnings in
contributions or 1.3 percentage points on VAT. For all ten social insurances,
including sickness insurance, the working group estimates that the equivalent
of a 6.8 percentage point increase in VAT would be needed. However, it recom-
mends mixed financing, including the possibility of an energy tax. Another
government working group has now been charged with devising a financing
scheme and looking at possible future changes in benefits.
The Swiss Employers� Association said that the report demonstrated the need to
halt expansion of the welfare state. The three bourgeois coalition parties also
voiced disquiet. But the socialist home affairs minister, Ruth Dreifuss, argued
that the costs were manageable and that there was no need to overdramatise
the situation. There was no question of dismantling the social welfare system;
on the contrary, it should be consolidated and the gaps filled, a reference to the
long-promised introduction of maternity benefit. Ms Dreifuss noted that social
charges in Switzerland were lower than in the EU (although they have more
than doubled to one-quarter of GDP since the 1950s) and said that most of
those in charge of the economy �cared about social cohesion�.
Certainly there is a split in the ranks of employers between those advocating
liberal views which put market forces in the driving seat and those who
believe enterprises have responsibilities to workers and society as well as to
shareholders. Guido Richterich of Roche, the Basle chemicals giant, who is
Switzerland 15
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
president of the Swiss Employers� Association, advocates a social moratorium,
deregulation, cuts in government spending, labour-market flexibility and a
reduction in the role of trade unions. Against that, Hans-Dieter Vontobel of
Vontobel Bank in Zurich, one of Switzerland�s biggest private banks, has criti-
cised those �who want to reduce society to a vulgar and one-dimensional
liberalism� and Robert Studer, the president of Union Bank of Switzerland
(UBS), Switzerland�s biggest bank, argues that companies cannot devote them-
selves exclusively to shareholders� interests.
Trade unions and
ecologists call for a lower
retirement age
Two separate initiatives calling for flexible retirement from the age of 62 have
collected the required 100,000 signatures needed for a national vote. One is
sponsored by the Swiss Ecology Party and the other by trade unions. The Greens
want the cost of the plan�put at around Swfr500m�financed by a tax on
energy while the trade unions favour a mixture of higher VAT and increased
contributions. Critics claim the cost could run as high as Swfr3bn. Yet another
initiative, deposited last year by the main trade union federation, calls for a
reversal of the decision in the tenth revision of the state pension scheme to raise
the retirement age for women from 62 to 64.
Like other countries in Europe, Switzerland has an ageing population. In 1950,
two years after the introduction of the state pension scheme, there were
6.2 people employed for every pensioner. In 1995 the ratio was 2.9:1 and it will
be close to 2:1 by the year 2000. The next revision of the state pension scheme
will concentrate on financing and the possible revision of benefits. Ms Dreifuss
says that the revision will also contain proposals for flexible retirement that
treat men and women equally.
Meanwhile, a working group of the right-wing Swiss People�s Party has called
for drastic measures to cut retirement benefits, including raising the retirement
age for women to 65, the same as for men. The working group, whose report
has not yet been accepted by the party, also advocates means-testing for state
pension benefits and a wait of a month before unemployed people can claim
benefits.
Sickness insurance is still
causing disquiet
Unhappiness with the new law on sickness insurance that came into force this
year looks likely to continue, with the announcement by several insurers
of further steep increases in premiums of between 10% and 30% next year.
Premiums rose sharply in 1996 on introduction of the law, which requires
insurers to charge the same premium for basic treatment, regardless of age,
sex or state of health. At the same time, state subsidies were trimmed and
reallocated to the poorest families, with the result that middle-income families
have had to pay much more.
The federal government has ruled out urgent changes in the law, arguing that
provisions on reducing health costs will eventually mitigate premium costs.
But it has acted to lessen the pain for households in western Switzerland where
premiums are highest. These cantons will get extra money to reduce premiums
next year out of the Swfr2.7bn total set aside for this purpose. Not content with
this, the far-left Swiss Workers� Party has launched a people�s initiative
that would require the federal government to meet half the costs of sickness
insurance.
16 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
In July insurers Helvetia and Artisana announced a merger, creating a new
company, Helsana, which will come into operation from the beginning of next
year. Helsana will be Switzerland�s biggest health insurer, with 1.5 million
contributors. The merger decision follows the break-up last year of a holding
company, Swisscare, created in 1993 to link Helvetia with two other health
insurers, Concordia and KFW. One of Helsana�s priorities, like that of Swisscare,
will be to try to reduce medical charges, especially for private hospital care
where doctors� fees can be exorbitant. A hospital childbirth that costs
Swfr2,500-3,000 ($2,000-2,400) with a bed in a communal ward may cost
Swfr20,000 privately, according to Helsana.
The OECD calculates that Switzerland has the highest health spending of any
member country after the USA, at 9.3% of GDP in 1994. Spending per person
was $2,294, compared with $3,516 for the USA and $1,965 for Austria, the
runner-up in Europe.
The cost of medicines in Switzerland is also much higher than in neighbouring
countries, reflecting high margins on drugs sold at mandatory fixed prices. The
protection afforded by these margins has led to a rise of one-fifth in the number
of pharmacies in Switzerland over the past ten years to more than 1,600�to
which must be added about 900 drugstores selling non-prescription drugs.
Many will not survive the deregulation planned for the sector. Next year
medicine prices will be partially liberalised, paving the way for full deregulation
after the year 2000, which should bring prices down closer to the European
average. This is simply recognition of the inevitable, as the fixed-price system is
clearly incompatible with the law outlawing price cartels that came into force on
July 1.
The pharmacies currently have about 60% of the Swfr4bn drugs market in
Switzerland, with doctors and hospitals dispensing another third. However, the
supermarket chain, Migros, has expressed interest in selling over-the-counter
medicines. In addition, the association regulating pharmacies has recently
agreed to offer sickness insurance companies a rebate on the cost of medicines,
following news that some health insurers plan to distribute drugs themselves to
patients suffering from chronic ailments.
A national debate on
energy policy is planned
The energy minister, Moritz Leuenberger, plans a national debate this autumn
on energy policy after the year 2000 when the existing programme �Energy
2000" expires. Mr Leuenberger has already made clear his support for the
principle that energy prices should reflect true costs. According to an expert
report published in July, including environmental and health costs, and the
costs of ancillary infrastructures, would mean consumers paying an extra
Swfr11bn-16bn per year. This idea is unlikely to go down well with industry,
which already complains that energy costs in Switzerland are too high by
comparison with competitors.
Paradoxically, government plans to liberalise the electricity market to be pre-
sented later this year are expected to result in lower electricity prices. The
government intends to follow the EU in allowing big industrial consumers to
choose their suppliers, although complete liberalisation will have to await a
restructuring of the industry. About 1,200 electricity producers, mostly publicly
Switzerland 17
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
owned, share the Swiss market, a fragmentation that is clearly inefficient. How-
ever, consolidation is likely to be bitterly opposed by the cantons and com-
munes, which take about a fifth of the final price of electricity in taxes.
In June the lower house of parliament followed the upper house in approving an
increase in the price paid to mountain cantons for the use of their water for
hydroelectricity from Swfr54 to Swfr80 per kw, raising their income from this
source from Swfr270m to Swfr400m per year (2nd quarter 1996, page 15). Ind-
ustry representatives have hinted that they may launch a referendum campaign
against the increase which will add 0.2 centimes to the price of a kilowatt-hour.
Nuclear wastes may still
go to Wellenberg
On expert advice, the government is leaning towards creating a dump at
Wellenberg in the canton of Nidwald to take low-level and medium-level
radioactive wastes from its five nuclear power stations. This is despite last year�s
local referendum opposing the move. The experts say that technically and
geologically Wellenberg offers the safest location for lodging the wastes. The
Federal Council, which is due to take a decision later in the year, is legally
entitled to override the referendum vote, but will probably decide on extra
safety and other precautions to lessen local objections.
Reforms are planned for
Swiss Federal Railways
The Federal Council has proposed a framework law governing the railway
system which would, among other things, oblige the Swiss Federal Railways to
create separate divisions for infrastructure and operations. The railways would
be able to charge private operators of freight and certain passenger services
wanting to use the infrastructure, subject to some fairly strict conditions giving
priority to a coordinated railway transport system. The public authorities
would also have to pay for the maintenance of loss-making lines or lose the
services. However, freight transport would continue to be subsidised as long as
road transport does not pay its true costs. The Swiss Federal Railways would be
given full management autonomy as a public corporation, subject to parlia-
mentary approval every four years of a level of service provision and a broad
financial package. Railway staff will no longer be treated as civil servants. At the
same time, the railways� accumulated losses�likely to be around Swfr1bn by
January 1988�will be written off, and government loans of Swfr12bn will be
converted into share capital of Swfr8bn.
The Federal Railways made a record loss of Swfr496m in 1995, due partly to
special charges including the introduction of VAT, restructuring costs, and
capital write-offs for the sale of stakes in its freight forwarding arm, Cargo
Domicile, and Hotelzug (railway hotels). Receipts for passenger traffic were
down by 7.3% and for freight traffic by 8%.
The SNB continues an
easier monetary policy
Adjusted central bank money, the target measure of the Swiss National Bank
(SNB, the central bank), has grown rapidly this year as the bank has responded
to depressed economic activity and the strength of the franc. At the end of July,
the bank injected extra funds into the money markets, a rare move that followed
nervousness in the foreign exchange markets in thin summer trading. The bank
said that it considered the Swiss franc to be massively overvalued and that there
was no sound economic basis for it.
18 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Money supply
(% change, year on year)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr
Cash in circulation 1.7 0.5 0.6 0.3 0.3 0.9 2.3
Money supply (M1) 5.6 1.7 4.2 7.0 9.9 6.9 17.1
Money supply (M2) 10.2 1.7 4.0 7.2 9.7 5.1 16.7
Seasonally adjusted central
bank moneya 0.6 1.5 1.8 1.9 1.4 1.4 4.8
a Swiss National Bank target measure.
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique .
The discount rate remains at 1.5%. However, money-market rates have begun
to rise, reflecting markets� expectations of faster growth in demand and slightly
higher inflation. Nevertheless, both short-term and long-term rates remain
below equivalent rates in the EU�s hard-core, which at mid-August stood at
3.25% and 6.25% respectively, 150-200 basis points above Swiss rates.
Interest rates
(%; period averages unless otherwise indicated)
1995 1996
1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr
Official discount ratea 3.00 3.00 2.00 1.50 1.50 1.50
3-month Euro-deposits 3.79 3.25 2.75 2.02 1.63 2.07
Confederation bonds 5.18 4.72 4.37 3.78 4.08 4.19
a End-period.
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
SNB�s investment policy is
to be examined
A joint working party of the SNB and the Swiss finance ministry is to examine
the bank�s investment policy, currency management and profit transfers. In
April the bank announced that it would transfer only Swfr142m of its profits
for 1995 to the federal and cantonal governments, the first time such transfers
had fallen below Swfr600m since they began in 1991. The reduction drew
criticism from some commentators that the bank was not managing its reserves
efficiently. The bank itself wants a change in the rules which now bar it from
investing currency reserves for a maturity of more than 12 months.
The economy
The economy may have
bottomed out�
Switzerland�s gross domestic product fell by an annualised 0.1% in real terms
between the fourth quarter of 1995 and the first quarter of 1996, the fourth
consecutive quarter-on-quarter decline. However, the quarter-on-quarter drop
was only slight compared with previous quarters, which suggests that the
contraction in economic activity which began in the second quarter of 1995
may be coming to an end. However, the GDP figures have also been revised
downwards for previous quarters, revealing a sharper decline than previously
thought. Over the year to the first quarter 1996, the drop was 0.7%, compared
with 0.3% in the fourth quarter of 1995. Domestic demand is at a low ebb:
household spending is feeble, government spending is down in real terms and,
Switzerland 19
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
for the first time in over two years, fixed investment has also fallen on an
annual basis. The foreign balance made a small positive contribution to growth
in the first quarter, with the rise in exports exceeding that of imports.
Trends in components of gross domestic product
(% real change, year on year)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr
Private consumption 1.0 �0.2 1.0 0.5 �0.3 0.2 0.5
Public consumption 0.8 0.1 0.1 �0.3 �0.1 �0.1 �0.3
Fixed investment 5.9 10.4 6.1 2.9 2.6 5.3 �1.3
Construction 3.2 0.0 �0.7 �1.9 �3.1 �1.5 �4.0
Equipment 11.0 25.2 18.3 12.4 13.1 17.2 1.8
Exports of goods & services 3.3 2.2 5.0 3.0 1.2 2.8 3.0
Goods 4.9 5.2 7.0 4.5 0.7 4.2 3.2
Services �2.4 �8.6 �2.8 �1.7 4.1 �2.6 2.4
Imports of goods & services 9.0 11.0 7.5 3.3 4.2 6.4 2.5
Goods 9.5 11.4 7.8 3.0 3.9 6.5 2.2
Services 3.8 5.3 4.3 4.6 8.6 5.4 7.8
GDP 1.2 1.7 1.1 0.4 �0.3 0.7 �0.7
Source: Département fédéral d l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
�but consumer spending
is still stagnant�
Consumer spending rose by 0.5% in real terms between the first quarters of
1995 and 1996, but this partly reflects the early Easter in 1996 and the extra
Leap Year day in February. Some estimates put the effect of an extra day�s
production at 1-1.5%, at least in theory. Retail sales remain depressed but
spending on services, with the notable exception of leisure and tourism, rose in
the quarter. The number of hotel nights spent in Swiss hotels has fallen steadily
since 1991, while spending on holidays abroad tapered off in the first quarter.
New car registrations also declined in the three months to March after having
picked up at the end of 1995. Meanwhile, consumer confidence has sunk to its
lowest level for two-and-a-half years, according to the government�s quarterly
survey in April, with households even less ready to make big purchases than
they were before. Fears about job insecurity are the main reason.
�and investment fell� Fixed investment fell by 1.3% in the year to the first quarter 1996, as the boom
in spending on plant and equipment levelled off. Investment in new equipment
rose by just 1.8% in the 12 months to the first quarter, after a 13.1% rise in the
fourth quarter and an increase of 17.2% for 1995 as a whole, when it accounted
for a record 12% of GDP. However, the low first-quarter increase partly reflects
the very high annual growth of over 25% in the final quarter of the previous
year. Spending on office machinery and commercial vehicles continued to be
strong, as was investment in new aircraft. Nevertheless, more than three-quar-
ters of investment expenditure is spent on imports rather than benefiting dom-
estic producers. The Swiss machinery industry suffered a big drop in orders in
the first quarter, from foreign as well as from domestic customers.
Meanwhile, construction investment continued to fall, by 4% in the year to the
first quarter. There is no sign that the declining trend for most of last year is
about to be reversed. Housebuilding has been particularly depressed after a
shortlived boom in 1994. Deliveries of bricks and cement fell by 10% in the first
quarter of 1995 compared with 12 months earlier. New construction orders,
20 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
registered by members of the Swiss Entrepreneurs� Association that groups build-
ing employers, were 15% lower in nominal terms in the first quarter than in the
same period of 1995. All types of building were affected.
�although exports
remain healthy
Despite the strong Swiss franc and sluggish growth in the rest of Europe,
exports of goods have been remarkably buoyant. They rose by 3.2% in real
terms in the year to the first quarter after stagnating in the fourth quarter.
Exports of jewellery, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, machinery and electronic
goods were all up from last year, although exports of textiles and watches fell.
There was a slight decline in deliveries to members of the EU, including
Germany, Switzerland�s largest single customer. However, exports to the USA,
Canada and Japan were buoyant, as were deliveries to OPEC countries and
Singapore, India and South Korea.
Exports of services were up by 2.4% in the first quarter compared with the
year-earlier period, with banking services particularly in demand. However,
earnings from tourism again declined in real terms.
Import growth slows Economic stagnation has slowed the growth of imports, which rose by only
2.5% in the year to the first quarter, the smallest increase since the third
quarter of 1993. Most of the growth was in consumer goods, where imports
rose by 6.2% over the year, notably for pharmaceuticals. Imports of household
goods and equipment, and jewels, were the only sectors to show a decline.
Imports of investment goods, which had notched up double-digit growth over
the eight quarters in 1994 and 1995, rose only slowly in the first quarter of
1996. This was partly due to the general economic effect mentioned earlier.
Imports of raw materials and semi-finished goods fell.
Industrial production
(% change year on year unless otherwise indicated)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr
All industry 8 7 5 3 �2 3 n/a
of which:
textiles 12 2 �6 �9 �10 �5 n/a
chemicals 14 11 12 9 7 10 n/a
metallurgy 9 6 1 �3 �6 �1 n/a
machinery 6 4 5 11 �4 4 n/a
watchmaking �11 �6 1 4 �16 �4 n/a
Industry excl utilities 8 7 6 6 �2 4 n/a
New orders 9 4 �1 �1 �8 �1 n/a
Capacity utilisation (%) 83.7 85.1 85.3 85.2 85.0 85.2 84.0a
a Preliminary estimate.
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
Production falters Official data on industrial production are not yet available for the first quarter.
However, the indications are that industrial production and orders contracted
year on year in the first quarter of 1996. Capacity utilisation sank to 84%, its
lowest level for two years. The fall-off in orders affected industries geared to
domestic production as well as those with large export markets. The investment
goods sector was particularly depressed, with lower production and orders in the
Switzerland 21
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
metalworking and machinery industries. The fortunes of the consumer goods
sector were more mixed. Orders rose for food, drink and tobacco and fell for
textiles, clothing and watches. Orders and production in the chemicals industry
stagnated, while output sank in the building materials sector.
Employment falls Employment continued to fall in the first three months of 1996, by 1.1% on
the year-earlier period according to the index that covers full-time work and
part-time employment of at least 50%. Worst affected was the construction
industry where employment fell by 4.2%, but there were also declines for
manufacturing and services. The latest figures mean that employment has
fallen more or less continuously since the second half of 1991, albeit at a slower
pace in the past two years.
Figures for total industrial employment also show a steady decline to below
3 million in the first quarter of 1996, a fall of 0.4% from the same period in
1995. Part-time working (over 50%) increased but not by enough to make up for
the loss of full-time jobs. In addition to 2,572,000 people working full-time,
417,000 people occupied part-time jobs of more than 50% of normal hours.
Another 436,380 people worked less than 50%. The economically active popul-
ation, which includes workers in agriculture and the self-employed, also fell by
0.4% over the year to the first quarter.
Unemployment, which increased in the early months of 1996, levelled off in
the summer for seasonal reasons, falling from 162,377 (4.5% of the workforce)
in May to 159,900 (4.4%) in June, according to national definitions. However,
at 4.5% in the second quarter, unemployment remains 0.3 percentage points
above its year-earlier level. Moreover, the federal employment office, which in
January was predicting an average of 140,000 jobless in 1996, is now expecting
a figure of around 163,000 (4.5%). Unemployment is predicted to fall to
155,000 on average in 1997 but this is still higher than last year�s
153,316 (4.2%).
Short-time working also rose in the first part of 1996, especially in the construc-
tion and metalworking industries.
Trend in employment by sector
(�000; % change year on year in brackets)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr
Building industry 281 280 290 296 277 286 272
(�0.8) (2.5) (2.8) (1.0) (0.3) (1.6) (�2.8)
Machinery & vehicles 137 138 138 138 139 138 139
(�4.0) (1.6) (0.3) (0.8) (0.8) (0.9) (1.2)
Metals & metal manufactures 94 94 95 95 94 95 94
(�0.1) (0.4) (1.9) (�0.1) (�1.0) (0.3) (�0.6)
Chemicals 75 74 74 76 75 75 75
(2.3) (0.2) (�1.1) (0.7) (0.6) (0.1) (0.8)
Jewellery & watchmaking 37 37 37 37 37 37 37
(4.4) (3.5) (1.8) (0.4) (0.1) (1.4) (�0.4)
Total employment
incl others 3,776 3,782 3,787 3,801 3,761 3,783 3,766
(�0.2) (1.0) (0.5) (�0.5) (�0.3) (0.2) (�0.4)
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
4.5
5.0
5.5
6.0
6.5
May. . Jul . . Oct . . Jan . . Apr
Unfilled vacancies'000, seasonally adjusted
Source: OECD, Main Economic Indicators.
199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995 961995 961995 96961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 961995 96
22 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Unemployment
(period averages)
1995 1996
1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr
Number 164,647 151,662 145,096 151,860 153,316 165,354 162,164
Rate (%) 4.5 4.2 4.0 4.2 4.2 4.6 4.5
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
Inflation remains low Inflation has remained low and broadly stable during 1996, helped by the
continuing strength of the Swiss franc, which has kept import prices down. The
consumer price index rose by 0.7% in the year to July, the same as in June,
compared with an annual inflation rate of 2% in July 1995. After an inflationary
bout in the early 1990s, Switzerland has squarely reclaimed its traditional rank-
ing as one of the industrialised world�s lowest inflation countries. The May
inflation rate of 0.7% compares with an EU average of 2.7% (Germany 1.7%)
and an OECD average excluding Turkey of 3.9%.
Consumer and wholesale prices
(% change, year on year)
1995 1996
1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr
Consumer price index 1.4 1.9 2.0 1.9 1.1 0.8
Goods 0.5 0.5 0.2 0.0 �0.1 0.2
Services 2.0 3.0 3.4 3.4 2.0 1.3
Rents 0.3 1.4 2.2 2.5 2.1 1.4
Domestic goods 1.9 2.6 2.8 2.7 1.5 0.8
Imported goods �0.2 �0.3 �0.4 �0.4 �0.3 n/a
Wholesale price index 0.8 0.5 �0.3 �0.9 �1.9 �2.3
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
Foreign trade and payments
Export and import values
increase
Merchandise exports fell back in value terms from Swfr24.1bn ($21bn) in the
fourth quarter of 1995 to Swfr23.1bn in the first quarter of 1996 but were still
up on a year earlier. Export progress in the first quarter was concentrated in
chemicals and pharmaceuticals, with lower deliveries of machinery, watches
and precision goods. Deliveries to Japan and the UK rose in the first three
months of the year but, in general, exports to OECD members stagnated and
those to the EU fell slightly.
At Swfr23.3bn, imports were little changed in the first quarter 1996 from the
previous quarter, though they were again above levels of a year earlier. Increases
in imports of energy products, textiles, clothing and shoes, and cars, were offset
by falls for building materials, metals, machinery and watches. Imports from the
EU were up, notably from Italy, but imports from developing countries fell.
The trade balance is in
deficit in the first quarter
The trade balance showed a small deficit of Swfr100m ($81m) in the first
quarter, but preliminary figures from the Swiss customs administration suggest
that there was a small surplus for the first six months of 1996. This follows
three years of trade surpluses, which is unusual in a country that normally runs
a trade deficit and a reflection of the weakness of domestic demand and output.
Switzerland 23
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Foreign trade
(Swfr bn)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr Apr-May
Merchandise exports fob 90.2 22.6 23.1 22.2 24.1 92.0 23.1 15.5
Merchandise imports cif �87.3 �22.9 �23.0 �21.6 �23.2 �90.8 �23.3 �15.5
Trade balance 2.9 �0.3 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.2 �0.1 0.0
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
Export margins remain
tight
Export prices were unchanged in the first quarter of 1996 from a year earlier,
after falling throughout 1995. Since the Swiss franc was considerably higher
than 12 months previously, this indicates a further squeeze on exporters�
margins as they struggle to maintain foreign market share. Import prices also
fell, however, by 1.1% over the year to the first quarter (another consequence
of the strong currency), with the result that the terms of trade improved.
Foreign trade indicators
(% change, year on year)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr
Unit value of exports �0.7 �3.3 �1.4 �1.0 �1.6 �2.2 0.0
Unit value of imports �4.8 �1.8 �2.9 �0.8 �2.8 �2.3 �1.1
Terms of trade 4.3 �1.5 1.6 �0.1 1.3 0.2 1.1
Source: IMF, I nternat ional Financial Stat ist ics.
The tourism balance fell to Swfr2.1bn in 1995, the lowest level since the start
of the 1990s. This reflected both lower spending by foreigners in Switzerland
and record spending by Swiss tourists abroad. In the first half of 1996, there was
a further drop in tourist numbers: the number of nights spent in Swiss hotels
fell year on year by 5.8%. Hotel nights by foreigners slipped by 8%, with
Germans and Britons in particular staying away. Overnight stays by Swiss
customers also fell by 2.6% compared with the same period in 1995. The winter
season of 1995-96 was the worst for the tourism industry for 16 years, reflecting
the lack of snow early in the season as well as the strong Swiss franc and the
depressed economic situation in much of Europe.
Despite the troubles of the Swiss tourism industry, banking and other services
continued to be robust, boosting the services surplus to Swfr5.6bn in the first
quarter of 1996 from Swfr5.3bn a year earlier. As a consequence, the current-
account surplus grew to Swfr7bn from Swfr6.8bn in the year-earlier period.
Current account
(Swfr bn; net)
1994 1995 1996
Year 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr Year 1 Qtr
Merchandise trade balance fob 2.2 �0.3 �0.3 0.2 0.6 0.1 �0.5
Services balance 16.0 5.3 3.5 3.4 3.4 15.6 5.6
Investment income 11.7 3.0 3.0 3.3 3.4 12.6 3.1
Unrequited transfers �4.8 �1.2 �1.2 �1.3 �1.2 �4.9 �1.2
Current-account balance 25.1 6.8 5.0 5.5 6.1 23.5 7.0
Source: Swiss National Bank, M onat sbericht.
0
3
6
9
12
15
1990 91 92 93 94
Direct investment in developedcountriesSwfr bn
Source: Département fédéral de l'économie publique, LaVie économique.
24 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
The Swiss franc eases,
then rebounds
The Swiss franc showed signs of a welcome easing during May and June, only to
regain all the losses against the dollar in the space of a few days in July, as doubts
were expressed about EU countries� readiness for Economic and Monetary
Union (EMU) and as expectations of a rise in US interest rates faded. Between
the November 1995 peak and June 1996, the Swiss franc lost 9% of its value
against dollar, 2% against the D-mark, 12% against the Italian lira and 5%
against a trade-weighted basket of 15 currencies.
Exchange rates
(period averages)
1995 1996
1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr
Swfr:$ 1.17 1.16 1.19 1.16 1.20 1.26
Swfr:DM 0.83 0.83 0.81 0.81 0.81 0.82
Source: Département fédéral de l�économie publique, L a V ie é conom ique.
Financial news
The big Swiss banks plan
wholesale restructuring
After its suggestion for a merger with Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS) was
emphatically spurned last April (2nd quarter 1996, pages 23-24), CS Holding
hit the headlines again in July by launching a radical reorganisation that will
slash 5,000 or 15% of jobs worldwide. The move by CS Holding, which will
change its name to Credit (no accent) Suisse Group in January 1997, is
intended to make the group more profitable and competitive in the global
marketplace for financial services. The shake-up led to the resignation of the
group chief executive, Josef Ackermann, who will be replaced next January by
the present chief executive of Swiss Reinsurance, Lukas Mühlemann.
Mr Mühlemann, a former McKinsey management consultant, is widely cred-
ited with having transformed Swiss Re�s performance and doubled its profits
over the past two years.
The restructuring is also intended to cut costs in the overcrowded Swiss banking
market. The bank plans to cut the size of its domestic branch network from 376
outlets to fewer than 250, reducing its Swiss-based staff by 3,500. CS Holding
says it hopes to shed most staff by attrition rather than forced redundancies, but
the reduction is large in relation to the total workforce of 34,000 worldwide. The
reorganisation is expected to produce annual cost savings of about Swfr700m
($570m), but will initially cost an estimated Swfr1bn ($813m) in write-offs, to be
partly financed by the sale of some non-core assets, including the group�s 47%
stake in the electricity generator, Elektrowatt.
Analysts have welcomed the plan, which they say will enable CS Holding,
previously a loose and overlapping assortment of banking and financial inter-
ests, to streamline its operations. The Swiss branch network, in which the retail
activities of Credit Suisse, Swiss Volksbank and Bank Leu will be merged, will
become one of four new divisions. Another division will see investment and
corporate banking grouped together at the New York-based Credit Suisse First
Boston, which will rank second in the world after JP Morgan of the USA. The
other divisions will be Credit Suisse Private Banking and Credit Suisse Asset
Manager, which will manage institutional funds. The bank said that CS Holding
would change from a Swiss bank with international activities to an international
Switzerland 25
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
financial institution with headquarters and certain core businesses in
Switzerland.
The recentralisation of Credit Suisse activities matches the structure of its Swiss
rivals, the other two of the �big three banks�, UBS and Swiss Bank Corporation,
and follows similar moves by other European banks, notably Germany�s
Deutsche Bank. The new CS organisational chart bears a marked resemblance
to the structure announced six weeks earlier, with considerably less fanfare, by
SBC. UBS has also announced a restructuring of its domestic retail operations.
The latest figures from the Swiss National Bank (SNB, the central bank) show
that 228 bank branches closed in 1995, reducing their number to 4,945, the
lowest for 14 years. The number of banks fell from 494 in 1994 to 413 in 1995,
although this partly reflects the disappearance of finance companies from the
statistics. (In 1995 finance companies had to stop taking deposits from the
public or seek a banking licence.) A number of regional banks, and two cantonal
banks, merged or were taken over. Nearly 8,500 banking jobs have been lost
since 1990, when employment reached a record 127,626, compared with
119,133 at the end of 1995. However, the number of jobs created abroad, mostly
by the big banks, has risen steadily to 9,928 at the end of last year.
There is general agreement that Switzerland is vastly overbanked, with one
branch for every 1,400 inhabitants. Analysts suggest that another 25,000-30,000
jobs could go in the unprofitable retail banking sector over the next few years.
By contrast, a study commissioned by the Swiss Bankers� Association claims that
the management of other people�s money by Swiss banks contributes 3.5% of
added value to the economy, more than the chemicals industry or tourism. Half
the funds under management, put at Swfr2.34trn or 40% of the global total, are
managed by the big three banks.
The electronic bourse
finally begins operations
Switzerland�s electronic bourse system (EBS) finally began full operations in
August after several delays and false starts. The Swiss banks are hoping that the
EBS will help repatriate bond and share business lost to other financial centres
such as London by improving liquidity and transparency and reducing costs.
The EBS claims to be the first system in the world to combine clearing, settle-
ment and regulatory supervision with transaction activities.
The project has been bedevilled by problems since its inception in 1992, after
an earlier project had been abandoned. The start of the present EBS, originally
planned for March 1995, was postponed three times owing to trading software
problems. Meanwhile, the cost has escalated from an initial estimate of
Swfr40m to Swfr125m-130m, to which must be added an additional invest-
ment by the 50 banks participating in the system of Swfr400m-500m. The
switch to electronic trading means the demise of the open-outcry exchanges in
Zurich, Geneva and Basle, which closed their doors in August. Four other local
exchanges, in Lausanne, Berne, St Gallen and Neuchatel, shut in 1991.
A new stock exchange law to replace the cantonal regulations that previously
governed the individual exchanges was due to come into effect on July 1. It has
now been tentatively put back to January 1997 because further consultations are
needed about the accompanying regulations. Rules on takeovers and disclosure
requirements will come into force six months later, in July 1997. The law allows
26 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
companies to opt out of the takeover regulations which provide greater protec-
tion for the rights of public shareholders, provided they declare this position in
advance. The opt-out, which would allow discrimination against minority
shareholders, was designed for family-owned firms. However, companies elect-
ing to opt out are likely to be valued at a discount and a survey by Bank
Vontobel in May showed that only 8% definitely intending to opt out; over 60%
said that they would not do so and 25% had not made up their minds.
Government proposes new
law on money
laundering�
The Federal Council, Switzerland�s executive ruling body, has approved a draft
law to crack down on money laundering, including a controversial provision
requiring bankers to report suspicious transactions. The law would force money
managers to keep a paper trail on accounts and would allow the freezing of
suspicious assets pending an investigation. In 1994 Switzerland relaxed bank
secrecy laws to allow bankers to report suspicious transactions without risking a
criminal prosecution. But the new draft law would go further by requiring
bankers and others to report their suspicions that money may be coming from
the drug trade or other forms of organised crime. Though similar rules are
already in operation in many other countries, the Swiss Bankers� Association has
strongly opposed the reporting obligation, arguing that it will create needless
red tape and turn bankers into policemen.
The draft bill will widen the scope of anti-money laundering laws to include all
financial intermediaries, that is to say any person or company whose business
is managing or looking after money. This provision will cover a whole range of
financial services such as investment funds, life-insurance companies and asset
managers as well as lawyers and money-changers who are outside the range of
the present money laundering laws. They will have to observe �diligence� rules
already applied by the banks, requiring them to check their clients� identities
and be satisfied that the money is �clean�.
The draft law provides for suspicious transactions to be reported to a special unit
of the Federal Police Office, which will advise the prosecuting authorities as
appropriate. The government dismisses claims that there could be an avalanche
of reports, saying he expected around 100 each year. A recent report by the IMF
estimated that money laundering worldwide could total more than $500bn per
year, equivalent to 2% of world GDP.
�and urges more powers
for the federal prosecutor
Separately, the Federal Council has approved a draft law that would allow the
federal prosecutor to launch investigations into certain types of white-collar
crime, including organised crime and money laundering. The aim is to make the
criminal justice system speedier and more effective for crossborder cases. At
present, the 26 cantons and half-cantons, no matter how small, are responsible
for all criminal investigations in their jurisdictions except those involving drugs
and each canton has its own procedures. The proposed legislation would enable
the federal prosecutor to conduct initial enquiries into complex cases involving
activities abroad or in several cantons, and then to pass them on to a chosen
canton to take through the courts.
The draft law also calls for the introduction of a central automated register of
criminal violations to replace the present decentralised system used by the
federal government and the cantons. In addition, it enlarges the rights of
Switzerland 27
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
defendants in federal cases, for instance, on access to lawyers, bringing
Switzerland into line with most other west European countries. To implement
the new law will require up to a dozen more staff for the prosecutor�s office and
60-70 more for the Federal Police Office.
Switzerland�s federal prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, has campaigned ceaselessly for
tougher procedures to combat organised crime and money laundering, which
accounted for nearly 100 investigations in Switzerland last year. She argues that
the Swiss banking system continues to attract dirty money, not only from the
mafia and drug cartels but also funds derived from corruption and tax fraud
which, if committed abroad, are not treated as crimes in Switzerland. Most of
the money comes from Italy, Russia and other east European countries,
and North and South America, according to Ms Del Ponte. In recent years
Switzerland has introduced laws against money laundering (1990), organised
crime (1994) and computer crime (1995), and a central office on organised crime
has been set up within the Federal Police Office.
New head of commission
to find Holocaust accounts
A former chairman of the US Federal Reserve Board, Paul Volcker, has been
appointed chairman of a six-member commission set up by the Swiss Bankers�
Association and the World Jewish Congress to investigate unclaimed assets of
Holocaust victims (2nd quarter 1996, page 26). In addition, the Federal
Assembly (parliament) will consider proposals in the next few months which
would permit a more wide-ranging government enquiry into money or stolen
treasure which the Nazis might have deposited in Swiss banks or moved to other
safe havens through Switzerland. Intelligence documents from US National
Archives, made public this year, show that the Nazis made extensive use of
neutral Switzerland as a repository for gold and other assets looted during the
Second World War. Parliament must approve a lifting of bank secrecy rules,
although with extensive safeguards, for any such enquiry to be effective.
Business news
Power firms to offer Swiss
telephone service
Six of Switzerland�s largest electricity companies have formed a joint venture,
Diax, to provide telephone services when Switzerland�s Swfr12bn ($10bn) tele-
communications market is deregulated in 1998. It is the third venture to be
announced this year that seeks to compete with state-owned Swiss Telecom
PTT, which now controls domestic, public phone services and phone lines.
Diax, which is seeking an international telecoms partner, said that it hopes to
provide a full spectrum of voice and data services for private and business
customers.
Diax will also compete with another consortium, provisionally named New
Telco, which is being formed by Swiss Federal Railways, Union Bank of Switzer-
land (UBS) and the Swiss supermarket chain Migros (2nd quarter 1996, page 31).
Like the railways, the electricity companies already have an internal fibre-optic
network that could be used for transmission. Other potential competitors in-
clude the Global One consortium formed by Sprint of the USA, France Telecom
and Deutsche Telekom, and Concert, a joint venture of the UK�s BT and MCI
Communications.
28 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Swiss Telecom has not been idle. In the latest of a run of acquisitions and joint
ventures (2nd quarter 1996, pages 30-31), Swiss Telecom and its Swedish, Span-
ish and Dutch partners in Unisource plan a telecoms partnership with the
Hungarian national railway company. Meanwhile, Swiss Telecom has acquired
an important stake in the Swiss cable television network with the recent deci-
sion to merge two of the biggest operators, Rediffusion and Cablecom, partly
owned by Swiss Telecom. Cablecom and Rediffusion each have 600,000 sub-
scribers out of 2.3 million cabled households.
In June the government published its bill on telecoms liberalisation, which will
split the PTT into separate post and telecoms businesses. The postal service will
become a new state agency. However, Swiss Telecom will lose its monopoly
and will be partly privatised in a joint-stock company, Telecom PTT, although
the government will retain a controlling stake. The bill allows companies to bid
to provide a universal basic service to all subscribers; for the first five years this
service will be assured by Telecom PTT while competitors get going.
Von Roll sells steelmaking
to von Moos
Von Roll, formerly Switzerland�s biggest steel producer, has sold its domestic
steel unit to von Moos, the country�s only remaining steelmaker. Von Roll,
which last year posted its first profit since 1990, has been trying to get rid of
loss-making and non-core businesses to concentrate on its engineering casting
machinery, electrical insulation and environmental technology businesses.
Von Roll said that it had tried to make the steel business profitable but the
collapse of steel prices at the end of last year had made a sale inevitable. The
company is also seeking �a joint solution� with von Moos for their steel plants
in the USA.
Some 570 of Von Roll�s 6,000-strong workforce will join von Moos but there are
likely to be redundancies in the combined steel workforce of 1,900. Von Roll
has already closed down its Monteforno works in Italian-speaking Switzerland
but has invested heavily in the modernisation of its Gerlafingen plant. To
finance the deal von Moos will increase its capital, with 70% of the stock of the
recapitalised company being held by the three big Swiss banks, Swiss Bank
Corporation, Credit Suisse and Union Bank of Switzerland. The banks also own
nearly 50% of Von Roll. This is another example of the close involvement of
the Swiss banking system in restructuring the corporate sector, with the banks
prepared to put up capital to save companies and jobs where they believe that
a successful turnaround is possible. However, the outlook for von Moos, which
will have annual sales of Swfr900m ($732m) and a lead position in reinforced
steel in Switzerland, remains uncertain in view of the continued difficult situ-
ation in the world steel market.
Von Roll later announced the sale of its majority stake in a ski-lift subsidiary to
an Austrian company, Doppelmayr, the world leader. Von Roll will keep a 20%
shareholding. It will also spin off its paper conveyor activities into a separate
company.
Swissair buys the Allders
duty-free group�
Swissair has bought the UK retail group, Allders, for £160m ($248m) after
winning a fierce bid battle with the British Airports Authority (BAA). BAA is
expected to cancel the management contracts it has with Allders at seven UK
airports, including Heathrow and Gatwick, and set up its own duty-free
Switzerland 29
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
operations. Allders, the second biggest duty-free operator after DFS (Duty Free
Shoppers) of the USA, has 200 duty-free shops in Europe, North America and
Australasia. Swissair wants to build up its duty-free activities through its
Nuance subsidiary to help reduce dependence on its core airline business. Last
year it bought two Australian companies, Mcleod and City International Duty
Free Australia. With the acquisition of Allders, Nuance will have about 7-8% of
the world market, an annual turnover of Swfr1.5bn and employ some 3,000
people. But analysts say Swissair has paid a hefty price, given the likely loss of
the BAA management contracts and an EU decision to scrap duty-free sales
from 1999. Intra-European sales account for one-third of the Allders duty-free
business.
�and launches yet
another cost-cutting
programme�
Swissair is aiming to cut personnel costs by 5% in 1997, contributing
Swfr100m-500m of savings sought by the group by 1998. These will involve a
further 1,200 job cuts in addition to the 1,600 already announced. The
programme targets salaries, social contributions and fringe benefits, while
management pay is to be more closely linked to performance. Swissair�s pilots
have already agreed a 5% pay cut, saving Swfr60m per year, as well as increased
working hours. Cabin crews have also agreed a deal to save Swfr7m, while a
framework accord has been reached with associations representing
8,500 ground-based staff covering such issues as the �13th-month� salary (a
13th monthly salary commonly paid as a bonus in Switzerland), pension plans
and health plan contributions.
�and gambles on inflight
casinos
Swissair has ordered an $80m inflight entertainment system from Interactive
Flight Technologies of the USA which will allow passengers on its 21 long-haul
jets to while away their time gambling. The first of the casinos, which are
operated by credit card, should be in operation in November. The Swiss national
lottery will get a share of the winnings from bingo and other games. Swissair is
not putting its own money into the project, which will financed by the US
company from its gambling earnings. Besides casino gaming, the Swissair
system will offer digital video-on-demand and various children�s video games.
US grants antitrust
immunity to Swissair
partnership
The US Department of Transportation has granted final approval for a market-
ing alliance between Delta Air Lines of the USA, Swissair, Sabena of Belgium and
Austrian Airlines. The decision gives them antitrust immunity, thus enabling
the four to operate as a single unit in the USA. Swissair is hoping to boost
collaboration with its partners, including more joint flights, to strengthen its
competitive position. Together, the four airlines have the second largest range of
North American connections after the proposed link-up announced in June
between British Airways and American Airlines.
Klaus Jacobs buys a
French cocoa-bean
processor
Klaus Jacobs, the Swiss financier who sold his Jacobs Suchard chocolate business
to Philip Morris in 1990, has bought Groupe Barry, a French cocoa-bean proces-
sor with 15% of the world�s capacity and a dominant position in European
markets. Klaus Jacobs Holding already owns Callebaut, a leading industrial
chocolate-maker based in Belgium, which will be amalgamated with Barry into
a new group with a combined turnover of Swfr1.8bn. An initial public offering
is planned for 1997 but Mr Jacobs will maintain majority control. The
30 Switzerland
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
acquisition roughly doubles his share of the independent chocolate market in
Europe to 50-55%, putting him in a powerful position in relation to companies
such as Europe�s largest biscuit manufacturer, Danone, which buys in almost all
its chocolate.
In May Mr Jacobs announced that he was merging the biggest company in his
empire, the Adia employment agency, with his biggest European competitor,
Ecco of France, thus creating the world�s second biggest manpower services
group (2nd quarter 1996, page 30). The new company, named Adecco, will be
based in Switzerland.
ABB in controversial dam
project
A consortium led by ABB Asea Brown Boveri has won a $5.5bn contract to build
Malaysia�s huge Bakun hydroelectric dam, the world�s second largest after the
Three Gorges dam in China. The contract, covering construction, transmission,
management and maintenance, is thought to be the biggest so far in the world
market for electric power engineering. However, a week after the contract
was announced, a Malaysian court ruled that the $5.5bn dam violated
environmental law and stipulated a new environmental impact assessment.
Environmentalists have called for all work to be stopped on the project which,
if implemented, will flood an area of Sarawak the size of Singapore and force
more than 9,000 tribal residents to move.
Switzerland 31
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Appendix 1
Quarterly indicators of economic activity in Switzerland
1994 1995 1996
1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4 Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr
Industrial production Qtrly figures
Index 1990=100 103 109 105 115 110 114 109 113 n/a n/a
Constructiona Monthly av
Buildings authorised �000 2.30 2.19 2.31 2.16 1.95 1.90 1.83 1.77 1.73 n/a
Dwellings completed � 1.76 1.51 1.74 2.15 1.71 1.79 2.02 2.14 1.51 n/a
Employment
Manufacturing �000 756 753 760 755 747 747 751 746 n/a n/a
Unemployed � 185.9 172.9 163.6 161.7 164.6 151.7 145.1 151.9 165.4 162.2
Vacancies � 5.2 5.5 5.5 4.7 5.1 6.6 5.5 4.4 5.3 6.4
Tourism
Nights spent in hotels m 3.12 2.55 3.91 1.92 2.88 2.50 3.58 1.90 2.73 2.13b
by foreign visitors � 1.79 1.51 2.36 1.00 1.62 1.50 2.12 0.99 1.51 1.22b
Retail trade
Turnover per working day 1990=100 105 101 97 114 103 104 97 113 103 99c
Prices
Consumer prices: � 114.8 114.6 114.8 114.8 116.4 116.8 117.1 117.1 117.6 117.7b
change year on year % 1.7 0.6 0.6 0.4 1.4 1.9 2.0 2.0 1.0 n/a
Producer prices May 1993=100 99 99 100 100 100 100 99 99 98 98c
Share prices: industrial 1990=100 172 159 154 153 150 160 170 184 197 206b
Money & banking End-Qtr
M1, seasonally adj: Swfr bn 90.32 89.99 90.41 90.52 89.31 92.41 95.59 96.04 104.28 104.57d
change year on year % 5.4 2.4 1.0 4.1 �1.1 2.7 5.7 6.1 16.8 n/a
Bank credits, short-term Swfr bn 364.4 355.1 352.2 356.1 347.4 356.2 338.7 243.4 257.6 257.5d
Monthly av
Net issues on capital
market Swfr m 5,289 44 2,864 2,261 3,566 2,242 3,200 2,423 1,530 1,531
on foreign account � 3,398 383 1,976 1,517 2,106 1,076 2,216 2,411 1,733 1,309
End-Qtr
Call money ratee % per year 4.10 3.98 3.53 3.56 3.53 3.04 2.84 2.35 1.80 2.42
Interest on three-month
deposits in major banksf � 3.49 3.57 3.63 3.49 3.22 2.70 2.11 1.44 1.12 1.77
Government bond yieldg � 4.31 4.91 5.30 5.32 5.18 4.72 4.41 3.78 4.08 4.19
Official discount rate � 4.00 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.00 3.00 2.00 1.50 1.50 1.50
Foreign trade Qtrly totals
Exports fob Swfr bn 22.38 21.99 21.44 24.50 22.65 23.04 21.94 24.04 23.11 15.51h
Imports cif � 21.04 22.09 21.21 23.03 22.92 23.02 21.55 23.15 23.28 15.55h
Exchange holdings End-Qtr
National Bank:
goldi $ bn 24.02 23.83 24.11 24.03 23.67 24.23 24.01 24.07 25.00 24.52j
foreign exchange � 30.23 31.90 30.86 33.55 30.64 32.34 32.89 34.69 30.15 31.29j
Exchange rate
Market rate Swfr:$ 1.41 1.34 1.29 1.31 1.14 1.15 1.14 1.15 1.19 1.26j
Note. Annual figures of most of the series shown above will be found in the Country Profile.a Figures for 269 towns of over 5,000 inhabitants. b Average for April-May. c April only. d End-April. e Zurich; last working day of month. f Zurich;
average of mid-month figures. g Average of daily rate. h Total for April-May. i End-quarter holdings at quarter�s average of London daily price
less 25%. j End-May.
32 Statistical appendices
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Appendix 2
Foreign trade of Switzerland
($ m)
Total Germany France Italy UK
Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec
Imports cif 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994
Foodstuffs 3,328 3,612 452 466 549 573 473 498 66 73
of which:
fruit & vegetables 1,159 1,273 54 53 142 149 242 251 2 2
Beverages 602 650 42 43 315 325 90 105 14 15
Tobacco & manufactures 183 198 36 28 3 3 5 6 4 4
Wood & cork 247 301 65 78 47 55 12 17 0 0
Pulp & waste paper 191 243 20 12 12 7 0 0 0 0
Textile fibres & waste 221 233 47 59 21 21 16 11 8 7
Mineral fuels & lubricants 2,423 2,238 618 596 214 158 251 212 128 117
Chemicals 8,389 9,397 3,049 3,353 1,238 1,368 717 735 564 538
Leather & manufactures 100 103 26 25 11 12 27 27 2 3
Rubber manufactures 501 531 170 174 75 79 54 61 29 29
Wood & cork manufactures 465 566 167 194 49 66 43 52 2 2
Paper & manufactures 1,308 1,423 510 530 135 152 67 79 33 49
Textile yarn, cloth & mnfrs 1,566 1,674 511 533 134 141 244 280 46 55
Non-metallic mineral mnfrs 3,953 3,690 424 444 216 226 264 299 1,518 1,411
Iron & steel 1,416 1,635 533 651 157 178 185 223 98 105
Non-ferrous metals 1,455 1,528 441 476 101 150 64 73 158 74
Metal manufactures 1,809 1,999 892 971 166 185 253 289 44 47
Machinery incl electric 12,635 14,013 5,086 5,600 934 1,042 1,050 1,144 811 1,013
Road vehicles 4,886 5,731 1,977 2,383 451 594 280 365 181 211
Other transport equipment 814 767 104 151 150 61 63 42 166 46
Heating, lighting fixtures etc 349 398 147 159 30 34 62 72 7 8
Furniture 1,350 1,478 559 592 180 191 258 301 16 20
Clothing 3,392 3,401 1,056 1,044 325 350 533 581 84 92
Footwear 700 711 124 121 63 72 276 276 7 9
Scientific instruments 1,188 1,210 581 556 73 85 55 52 55 52
Photographic appliances, optical
goods, watches & clocks 1,363 1,430 257 268 243 285 155 184 72 75
Total incl others 62,029 66,653 20,196 21,885 6,776 7,323 6,066 6,593 4,480 4,419
continued
Statistical appendices 33
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996
Foreign trade of Switzerland (continued)
($ m)
Total Germany France USA Italy
Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Dec
Exports fob 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994 1993 1994
Foodstuffs 1,499 1,596 323 355 165 172 89 106 222 214
of which:
dairy products 428 408 83 85 57 51 21 24 153 148
Textile fibres & waste 95 111 36 34 10 11 11 11 15 28
Metalliferous ores & scrap 151 188 58 65 10 15 1 1 51 72
Chemicals 15,788 17,257 2,702 3,186 1,699 2,017 1,433 1,442 1,605 1,484
of which:
medicinal & pharmaceutical
products 5,784 6,194 696 918 567 709 521 479 771 582
Wood & cork manufactures 257 262 113 115 35 37 4 4 40 39
Paper & manufactures 915 1,055 309 365 137 157 35 46 63 86
Textile yarn, cloth & mnfrs 2,000 2,069 545 562 179 194 82 78 272 301
Non-metallic mineral mnfrs 3,378 2,921 209 226 205 161 281 302 96 64
Iron & steel 812 837 410 422 76 85 26 20 76 74
Non-ferrous metals 1,134 1,472 310 369 117 144 60 105 75 99
Metal manufactures 2,328 2,519 884 923 224 250 191 224 144 152
Machinery incl electric 17,528 19,179 4,699 5,164 1,334 1,447 1,681 1,995 919 1,083
Road vehicles 703 745 336 368 41 52 60 80 31 25
Other transport equipment 527 477 102 54 52 59 83 71 27 13
Furniture 489 494 209 212 105 99 8 9 32 31
Clothing 640 654 289 274 30 27 28 35 60 65
Footwear 247 233 117 100 19 20 20 21 5 5
Scientific instruments 2,541 2,713 653 721 216 228 311 322 146 148
Photographic appliances, optical
goods, watches & clocks 5,740 6,214 635 664 358 355 705 766 581 544
Total incl others 64,541 68,904 14,806 16,136 5,883 6,329 5,761 6,321 5,019 5,131
34 Statistical appendices
EIU Country Report 3rd quarter 1996 © The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited 1996