Switzerland has fallen to 6th place in Transparency International's 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index, indicating an increased perception of public sector corruption. The organization points to a lack of transparency in lobbying and insufficient anti-corruption strategies in cantons and municipalities as contributing factors.

"This indicates an increased willingness to engage in corruption."
"There is a lack of transparency in lobbying and rules for the transfer of civil servants to the private sector."
Switzerland’s reputation for pristine governance is eroding before our eyes. In a blow to national pride, the country has slid to 6th place in Transparency International’s 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index, scoring just 80 out of 100 points. This is not merely a statistical fluctuation; it is a warning siren. The score represents a drop of one point from the previous year, signaling an alarming trend in the public sector's integrity.
The Swiss branch of Transparency International has issued a stark assessment: this decline indicates an "increased willingness to engage in corruption." For a nation that brands itself on stability and rule of law, this is a critical reputational hit. While the world often views Switzerland as a fortress of neutrality and order, the data reveals a fraying edge. We are no longer firmly on the podium; we are slipping, and the momentum is currently dragging us downward.
Transparency International explicitly slams the "inadequate" measures currently in place to safeguard Swiss democracy. The core of the rot lies in the shadows of lobbying. There is a glaring lack of transparency regarding who influences our laws and how. The organization points to the murky waters of political influence, where money and power intersect without sufficient public oversight.
Furthermore, the "revolving door" between public service and private gain remains wide open. There are insufficient rules governing the transfer of high-ranking civil servants directly into lucrative private sector roles, creating conflicts of interest that undermine public trust. This regulatory vacuum allows influence to be traded like a commodity. Until Bern addresses these structural deficiencies, the perception of corruption will likely continue to fester, proving that our current safeguards are simply not fit for purpose.
The corruption crisis is not confined to the federal halls of Bern; it permeates the very fabric of our federalist system. A staggering oversight exists at the local level: the cantons and municipalities possess "hardly any strategies" to combat corruption. This decentralized negligence creates pockets of vulnerability across the country where nepotism and opaque dealings can thrive unchecked.
While we pride ourselves on local autonomy, this fragmentation has become a liability in the fight against corruption. Without cohesive, robust anti-corruption frameworks in our 26 cantons and thousands of municipalities, Switzerland is fighting a complex war with one hand tied behind its back. The lack of standardized oversight means that what is considered corrupt in one jurisdiction might be business as usual in another, a disparity that Transparency International highlights as a major contributing factor to our falling rank.
Switzerland is now chasing the pack. We have been surpassed by Denmark, Finland, and Norway—nations that have successfully maintained their integrity firewalls. We also trail Singapore and New Zealand, leaving us tied in 6th place with Sweden. This is a humbling reality check. The countries ahead of us are not just winning on points; they are winning on transparency culture.
While sharing a spot with Sweden is hardly a disaster, the trajectory is the concern. The gap between Switzerland and the top-tier leaders like Denmark is widening. These nations have implemented the very transparency measures regarding lobbying and political financing that Switzerland continues to resist. If we wish to reclaim our status as a global leader in governance, we must stop looking at these rankings as mere numbers and start viewing them as a roadmap of where we are failing.
This is not a momentary stumble; it is a long-term slide. Over the last ten years, Switzerland has lost a staggering six points on the index. This decade of decline paints a picture of complacency in a changing world. While other nations have tightened their belts and shone lights into dark corners, Switzerland has rested on its laurels, assuming its reputation would protect it forever.
The implications are profound. A reputation for integrity is Switzerland's most valuable currency in international business and diplomacy. If this trend continues, we risk being viewed not as a beacon of stability, but as a hub of opaque dealings and unchecked influence. The message from Transparency International is clear: the time for half-measures is over. Immediate, decisive action is required to reverse this trend before 'Swiss Quality' becomes synonymous with 'Swiss Secrecy'.