Major Swiss defense contractors moving operations to foreign countries to circumvent strict neutrality-based export restrictions, impacting domestic jobs.

"Defense customers only placed new orders with us if we could guarantee that our products were not manufactured in Switzerland."
"I donât know any Swiss defence firm that hasnât already moved capacities abroad, or has at least a plan B ready."
The "Swiss Made" label, once a gold standard for precision and reliability, has mutated into a poison pill for the nation's defense sector. Leading the charge in this desperate industrial migration is Peter Huber, chairman of Systems Assembling, who is aggressively shifting operations from the canton of Neuchatel to Portugal. The reason is stark and undeniable: international clients are refusing to buy weapons components that carry the baggage of Bern's restrictive neutrality laws.
This is not a theoretical risk; it is a current economic reality costing Swiss livelihoods right now. To circumvent federal laws that prohibit sending domestic arms to conflict zones, Huber has been forced to slash his workforce in Boudry by a staggering 50%. Sixty skilled jobs have evaporated, sacrificed to keep the company viable by manufacturing cables for armored vehicles near Porto instead. "Defense customers only placed new orders with us if we could guarantee that our products were not manufactured in Switzerland," Huber declared, exposing the existential threat facing the sector. As long as the Swiss cross remains a symbol of bureaucratic deadlock rather than supply security, the exodus of manufacturing capacity will continue to accelerate.
While the rest of the world rearms at a feverish pace, Switzerlandâs defense industry is in freefall. Global military expenditure surged by over 9% in 2024âthe steepest climb since the end of the Cold Warâyet Swiss manufacturers are being left in the dust. In a devastating counter-trend, Swiss arms exports have plummeted by 30% in 2024, crashing to a six-year low from their 2022 peak.
The contrast is humiliating. European defense titans like Germanyâs Rheinmetall and Franceâs Thales are watching their stock prices soar, fueled by a continent desperate to fortify its borders against Russian aggression. Meanwhile, the Swiss sector, which contributes 0.2% to the national economic output, is shrinking. The United States, still Switzerland's second-largest buyer, has temporarily paused a 32% import tariff, but this mercy is a mere band-aid on a gaping wound. The data screams a clear warning: in a booming global market, Switzerland has managed to engineer its own recession.
Bern has effectively handcuffed its own industrial base with legislation that is proving fatal in the modern geopolitical climate. The core of the crisis lies in the strict "non-re-export" declaration. Swiss law explicitly forbids foreign governments from transferring weapon systems to third parties if they contain more than 50% Swiss-made components. This rigid stance has paralyzed the industry's ability to participate in the collective defense of Europe.
Crucially, the mechanism to fix this was dismantled from within. In late 2021âmere months before Russian tanks rolled into Ukraineâthe Swiss parliament scrapped a vital clause that allowed the government to grant exemptions to these export rules. This timing could not have been more catastrophic. The nation's doctrine of "armed neutrality" legally mandates an industrial capacity adapted to national defense, yet the current legislative framework is actively destroying the 14,000 jobs required to sustain that very capacity. By stripping away flexibility, Parliament has locked Swiss manufacturers in a cage of their own making.
Our neighbors are no longer just annoyed; they are moving on without us. The diplomatic fallout from blocking arms re-exports to Ukraine has resulted in a de facto blacklist of Swiss products across the continent. From Amsterdam to Berlin, the message is clear: Switzerland is an unreliable partner in a crisis. This sentiment was crystalized last August when Germanyâs head of armaments sent a chilling letter to his Swiss counterpart, explicitly stating that Swiss companies would be deliberately excluded from certain future procurement contracts.
This is a strategic shut-out. As NATO members ramp up spending to counter threats from Moscow and hedge against uncertainty regarding US commitments under Donald Trump, they are prioritizing supply chain security above all else. They simply cannot risk having critical ammunition or parts held hostage by Bern's neutrality debates. Matthias Zoller, general secretary of Swiss ASD, warns that as existing contracts expire, neighboring countries will begin manufacturing components domestically that were once the exclusive domain of Swiss engineering. We are being designed out of the European defense architecture.
The bleeding has only just begun. Industry leaders are no longer waiting for a political miracle from Bern; they are executing survival strategies that bypass Switzerland entirely. "I donât know any Swiss defence firm that hasnât already moved capacities abroad, or has at least a plan B ready," Huber admits. This statement signals a permanent structural shift rather than a temporary dip.
The implications for the Swiss economy are dire. As billions in European defense investments flow into the sector over the coming years, Switzerland stands to capture almost none of it. Matthias Zoller predicts the situation will significantly worsen as the "Swiss-free" supply chains become the new NATO standard. We face a future where Swiss defense companies exist in name onlyâheadquartered in Zurich or Geneva, but with their hearts, hands, and factories beating on foreign soil. Unless neutrality is redefined to match the reality of modern warfare, the Swiss defense industry will not just relocate; it will cease to be Swiss.