One-third of Swiss manufacturing companies now operating on reduced hours, with small and medium enterprises particularly affected by economic slowdown.

"If the proportion of short-time work is only low, the effort involved often exceeds the actual benefit."
"Small and medium-sized companies are particularly affected."
A staggering one-third of Swiss industrial companies have slammed the brakes on production, forcing employees into short-time work arrangements. This is not a minor fluctuation; it is a flashing red warning light for the national economy. The latest data from Swissmechanic reveals a sector grappling with a severe slowdown, as machines fall silent and shifts are cut across the country. While the majority of firms are still holding the line, the sheer volume of companies resorting to state-subsidized reduced hours signals a critical contraction in demand.
The manufacturing sector, long the jewel in the Swiss economic crown, is confronting a reality where order books are thinning and uncertainty reigns. This dramatic shift affects thousands of workers who now face reduced paychecks and job insecurity. The scale of this disruption suggests that the industrial powerhouse of Switzerland is facing headwinds that are far stronger than anticipated, shaking the confidence of a sector that prides itself on stability and precision.
The crisis is striking with surgical precision, targeting the very backbone of the Swiss economy: Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). The statistics are alarming. A massive 45% of companies with 10 to 49 employees have been forced to introduce short-time working measures. These smaller outfits, often family-run and specialized, lack the financial war chests of global conglomerates to weather prolonged storms.
In contrast, medium-sized firms with 50 to 249 employees are faring only slightly better, with 29% reporting reduced hours. This disparity highlights a dangerous vulnerability in the industrial ecosystem. When nearly half of the smallest industrial players are operating at reduced capacity, the ripple effects threaten local supply chains and regional employment stability. These are not just numbers; they represent a significant portion of the Swiss workforce now operating in limbo, as smaller firms struggle to keep their heads above water in an unforgiving economic climate.
This is no temporary blip. The duration of these measures reveals a crisis that is becoming dangerously entrenched. A full third of the affected companies have been operating on short-time work for over six months. This is not a short-term adjustment; it is a long-term survival strategy that is draining resources and morale.
The depth of the cuts is equally concerning. In 28% of these struggling firms, the impact is total or near-total, with between three-quarters and 100% of the workforce on reduced hours. Meanwhile, another quarter of companies have been in this state of suspended animation for three to six months. As weeks turn into months, the risk of permanent layoffs surges. The industrial sector is not just pausing; parts of it are beginning to atrophy, raising fears that some of this lost capacity may never return to Swiss soil.
While fighting for survival, Swiss companies are simultaneously battling a second enemy: red tape. Dissatisfaction with the authorities is mounting, as the lifeline of short-time work compensation comes attached to a web of administrative complexity. Only a meager 20% of companies described the approval process as quick and unbureaucratic.
For nearly one in five companies (17%), the process was a lengthy, bureaucratic nightmare. Swissmechanic notes that for firms with low proportions of short-time work, the administrative effort often exceeds the financial benefit, rendering the aid effectively useless. This inefficiency adds insult to injury for business owners already navigating a recessionary environment. The association sees an urgent need for action, as the friction between desperate companies and rigid state mechanisms threatens to accelerate insolvencies rather than prevent them.
Hope for a quick recovery is fading fast. The outlook for the immediate future is overwhelmingly negative, with Swissmechanic reporting that approximately 75% of the affected companies expect to continue short-time working measures. Only a minority—around a quarter—see any light at the end of the tunnel or expect the measures to end soon.
This pessimistic forecast suggests that the Swiss industrial sector is bracing for a prolonged period of stagnation. The implications for the broader economy are stark: reduced consumer spending from workers on lower incomes, stalled investment in new machinery, and a potential erosion of Switzerland's competitive edge in manufacturing. As the year progresses, the resilience of the Swiss industrial model is being tested like never before, and for now, the industry is preparing for a long, cold economic winter.