Switzerland's economy grew by a slight 0.2% in the fourth quarter of 2025, according to new figures from the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (Seco). This fragile rebound follows the previous quarter's contraction, which was driven by the impact of US tariffs on the chemical and pharmaceutical industries.

"The services sector saw slight growth while the industrial sector stagnated."
"The figures for October to the end of December show that economic activity is still fragile."
Switzerland is back in the black, but the victory is razor-thin. The national economy clawed its way to a modest 0.2% growth in the fourth quarter of 2025, effectively halting a dangerous slide into recession. This critical rebound comes on the heels of a bruising 0.5% contraction in the third quarterâa slump that sent shockwaves through the federal administration in Bern. According to the latest data from the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (Seco), the nation has narrowly avoided a prolonged downturn, yet the atmosphere remains tense.
While the return to positive territory is a relief, experts warn against premature celebration. Arthur Jurus, investment director at Oddo BHF Switzerland, cautions that "economic activity is still fragile." The numbers support this wariness: the 0.2% uptick is a far cry from a boom; it is a stabilization maneuver in a volatile global theatre. The recovery was not driven by a broad-based surge, but rather a desperate claw-back led by the services sector, which managed to offset the stagnation plaguing the nation's industrial heartland. Switzerland has stopped the bleeding, but the wound is far from healed.
The primary culprit for the recent economic turbulence is unmistakable: Washington. In August 2025, US President Donald Trump stunned the Swiss establishment by slamming a staggering 39% duty on imports from the Alpine nation. This aggressive move, one of the highest in his global tariff campaign, acted as an immediate brake on Swiss exports, directly causing the GDP contraction witnessed in the third quarter. The chemical and pharmaceutical giants, usually the bedrock of Swiss prosperity, were left reeling as their primary export market became prohibitively expensive overnight.
However, Swiss diplomacy scrambled to stop the hemorrhage. By November, a high-stakes deal was struck. The US agreed to slash the tariffs down to 15%âstill a burden, but a manageable one. The price for this relief? A massive commitment from the Swiss government to invest $200 billion in the United States. This diplomatic maneuvering likely saved the fourth quarter from disaster, but the psychological and financial scars remain. As Seco notes, "Exporters have been curtailed by the difficult international context," a polite bureaucratic phrase for a trade war that nearly derailed the Swiss economy.
Beneath the headline growth figure lies a starkly divided economy. We are witnessing a "two-speed" Switzerland. The Economy Ministry has been blunt in its assessment: "The services sector saw slight growth while the industrial sector stagnated." It was the services industryâbanking, insurance, and domestic servicesâthat did the heavy lifting to drag the GDP into positive territory. They are the unsung heroes of this quarter, showing resilience even as global winds blew cold.
In contrast, the industrial sector is still grappling with the aftershocks of the trade dispute. While the pharmaceutical sector managed to post growth in value-added termsâproving its historic resistance to economic downturnsâit was not enough to fully offset declines elsewhere. Thomas Gitzel, Chief Economist at VP Bank, points out the severity of the situation: "The decline recorded in the third quarter cannot be offset." This indicates that for export-oriented manufacturers, the lost ground is permanent. The machinery and metals sectors continue to confront a harsh reality where foreign demand is weak and the playing field is tilted by protectionism.
Zooming out to the full year, the numbers paint a picture of mediocrity. Switzerland achieved an annual GDP growth of 1.4% in 2025. While this surpasses the 1.2% of the previous year and the 1.3% of 2023, it remains underwhelming by historical standards. Seco highlights that this figure is "well below the countryâs average growth rate," which has stood at 1.8% since 1981. We are growing, but we are dragging our feet compared to the dynamism of past decades.
Compounding the challenge is the relentless strength of the Swiss Franc. The currency appreciated sharply in April 2025 and has remained stubbornly high. While this shields Swiss consumers from imported inflationâsupporting domestic purchasing powerâit acts as a hammer against exporters. Every rise in the Franc makes Swiss watches, machinery, and chocolates more expensive for foreign buyers. Seco acknowledges that the Franc's appreciation is a double-edged sword, keeping inflation low but suffocating the very industries trying to recover from the US tariff shock.
As we look toward 2026, the forecast is anything but clear skies. The consensus among economists is one of caution bordering on pessimism. Forecasts for the coming year are modest at best: BAK Economics predicts a sluggish 0.9% growth, while banks like J. Safra Sarasin and Raiffeisen are slightly more optimistic at 1%. Even the most bullish predictions, such as those from Oddo BHF, cap out at just 1.2%. These are not the numbers of a booming economy; they are the vital signs of a patient in stable but guarded condition.
Arthur Jurus sums it up perfectly: "These projections paint a picture of a resilient Swiss economy, but one that will not see a strong recovery in the short term." The road ahead is paved with uncertainty. With the US tariff situation only partially resolved and the Eurozone growing at a faster clip of 1.5%, Switzerland risks lagging behind its neighbors. The nation must navigate a treacherous path of weak foreign demand, a punishingly strong currency, and lingering geopolitical tensions. Resilience is the Swiss trademark, but in 2026, that resilience will be tested to its absolute limit.