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Maintaining Switzerland’s enviable living standards into the future

by Christine Lewis, Switzerland Desk, Economics Department

Switzerland’s high living standards and quality of life are renowned. It has the third-highest level of GDP per capita in the OECD. Likewise, survey data show Swiss have the OECD’s second-highest rate of life satisfaction. Unemployment is low, including for young people. And income inequality (after taxes and transfers) is around the OECD average.

But Switzerland cannot take these enviable outcomes for granted. Indeed, trends are slowly eroding this favourable position. The rate of potential growth in per capita income has slowed to just 0.5%. While Swiss GDP per hour worked was one of was of the highest 40 years ago, growth has stalled due to slow increases in investment and in multi-factor productivity (Figure). Demographics are also playing a role by reducing the share of the population that is of working-age. And immigration, which had helped offset this effect and ease skills shortages, is slowing too. Ageing will add to the fiscal burden: spending on pensions, health and long-term care is projected to increase by 3.5 percentage points of GDP in the next three decades, which risks crowding out other spending and pushing up debt (Federal Department of Finance, 2016).

The OECD’s latest Economic Survey of Switzerland highlights several win-win policies that can counter these trends by raising labour supply and skills while contributing to the inclusiveness of growth (OECD, 2017):

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References

Federal Department of Finance (2016), Report on the Long-term Sustainability of Public Finances in Switzerland, Federal Department of Finance, Bern.

OECD (2017), OECD Economic Survey of Switzerland, OECD Publishing, Paris.

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