Swiss Government Announces Major Budget Cuts Through 2029
Federal Council reveals ambitious austerity plan targeting CHF 2.4 billion in savings for 2027 and CHF 3 billion annually for 2028-2029.
Federal Council reveals ambitious austerity plan targeting CHF 2.4 billion in savings for 2027 and CHF 3 billion annually for 2028-2029.

"The countryâs public finances are a mess."
"If parliament rejects or waters down the proposals... further cuts will be neededâand sooner."
The Federal Council has dropped the hammer on runaway spending. In a decisive move to regain control of the nation's checkbook, the government has unveiled an aggressive austerity plan demanding a staggering CHF 2.4 billion in savings for 2027 alone. This is not a suggestion; it is a fiscal necessity. The belt-tightening intensifies rapidly, with targets soaring to CHF 3 billion annually for both 2028 and 2029.
Switzerlandâs public finances are effectively in a state of emergency. After years where spending velocity outpaced revenue growth, the government is slamming on the brakes. On Friday, the Federal Council dispatched this ambitious roadmap to parliament, setting the stage for a heated political showdown. The Council of States will grapple with these measures in the winter session, followed by the National Council in the spring. The message from the executive branch is crystal clear: the era of unchecked expenditure is over, and the time for financial discipline is right now.
A structural deficit of over CHF 2 billion looms over 2027, threatening to widen to a catastrophic CHF 4 billion just two years later. Despite previous attempts to curb spending in the 2024 and 2025 budgets, the financial bleeding has not stopped. The government confronts a reality where projected revenuesâforecast to hit CHF 98 billion by 2029âsimply cannot keep up with the explosive growth of federal obligations.
This widening gap has forced a complete reassessment of the 2027 spending architecture. Following intense consultations, the government scaled back its initial slash-and-burn target of CHF 2.7 billion to a slightly more moderate CHF 2.4 billion. However, this adjustment does not signal weakness. The plan remains a rigorous overhaul spread across nearly 60 distinct measures designed to plug the holes in the federal hull before the ship takes on too much water. Without this intervention, the structural integrity of Swiss federal finance is at severe risk.
The administration is turning the knife on itself. In a bid to lead by example, the plan dictates a cut of CHF 300 million from federal operating costs by 2028. The federal workforce faces the brunt of this tightening, with approximately CHF 190 million slashed directly from staff expenses. At least CHF 100 million of this sum will be extracted through rigorous changes to employment conditions.
This is a complex legislative maneuver. More than half of the proposed 60 measures require rewriting existing laws. To expedite this, the government will bundle these changes into a single, massive reform bill. This strategy prevents opponents from picking apart the plan piece by piece. Measures that do not require new legislation will be fast-tracked through the standard budget process. The bureaucracy is being forced to do more with significantly less, signaling an end to administrative bloat in Bern.
The Federal Council has issued a stark ultimatum to parliament: approve this plan, or face something far worse. If lawmakers reject or dilute these proposals, the government warns that the alternative is a blunt instrumentâa brutal 10% cut across critical sectors. This "Plan B" would indiscriminately hit education, research, development aid, agriculture, and defense.
The stakes are incredibly high. If the army were to be spared from this secondary axe, the cuts would fall with even greater devastation on education and agriculture. This is a calculated political move, forcing parliamentarians to choose between the structured, bundled cuts of the current plan or the chaos of slashing funding for Switzerland's most cherished institutions. The government argues that without this budgetary tightening, Switzerland would be forced into a spiral of borrowing to fund runaway spending, a path they are unwilling to take.
Switzerland is grappling with a debt load that has ballooned to alarming proportions. At the end of 2024, the federal government owed a staggering CHF 141 billionâroughly 17% of the nationâs GDP. To put this in perspective, in 1990, federal debt stood at just CHF 40 billion. The trajectory is undeniable and unsustainable.
When the debts of cantons and municipalities are added to the federal tally, the picture darkens further. Switzerlandâs total public debt pile rises to approximately 37% of GDP. While Switzerland remains fiscally healthier than many of its European neighbors, the trend is the enemy. The Federal Council's aggressive stance is a preemptive strike to prevent this mountain of debt from triggering a future avalanche. The days of easy money are gone; the focus now shifts entirely to solvency and stability.