US Trade Tensions Force Swiss Economic Growth Forecast Cut
BAK Economics reduces Switzerland's GDP growth projections to 1.2% for 2025 due to escalating US trade conflicts and global market uncertainties.
BAK Economics reduces Switzerland's GDP growth projections to 1.2% for 2025 due to escalating US trade conflicts and global market uncertainties.

"Trump couldnât care less about whatever rules there have been in the WTO. For him, itâs transactional. Itâs bilateral."
"The US is acting as if it were not a WTO member in terms of tariffs."
The verdict is in, and the numbers are sobering: Switzerlandâs economic engine is sputtering under the weight of American protectionism. BAK Economics has officially slashed its GDP growth forecast for 2025 to a modest 1.2%, a sharp downgrade from the previously anticipated 1.4%. This is not a temporary blip; analysts project the stagnation will persist through 2026, holding growth at that same 1.2% level.
The culprit is undeniable. Escalating trade conflicts initiated by the US administration are sending shockwaves through the Swiss economy. The uncertainty radiating from Washington is toxic for investment, forcing companies into a paralyzing holding pattern. When adjusted for major sporting eventsâwhich often inflate the numbersâthe picture is even starker, with underlying growth for 2025 plummeting to a mere 0.8%. As the US administration deploys sweeping tariffs to pressure allies and rivals alike, the collateral damage is landing squarely on Swiss soil.
Global trade is hemorrhaging, and Swiss exporters are on the front lines. BAK experts estimate that growth in the trade sector will be more than a third lower than previous forecastsâa staggering drop driven by the chaos of imposed and threatened duties. The threat is immediate: 25% tariffs on aluminum and steel imports are set to slam into the market on March 12, while the specter of a blanket 25% tariff on European goods looms large.
This is a full-blown disruption of the global order. While Canada and Mexico scramble to negotiate pauses, and China retaliates with agricultural levies, Europe is left mulling its response. The uncertainty is arguably worse than the tariffs themselves. In an environment where the rules change by the tweet, Swiss businesses are hesitant to make the critical decisions needed to drive future growth. The export machine, traditionally the jewel of the Swiss economy, is being stifled by a transatlantic trade war that shows no signs of cooling.
In stark contrast to the gloom hanging over exports, Switzerlandâs domestic economy remains a fortress of stability. While international trade falters, the internal engine is roaring, driven by robust private consumption and a resilient construction sector. This domestic strength is fueled by a significant surge in population due to high levels of immigration, ensuring that demand for housing and services remains at peak levels.
The fundamentals at home are rock solid. Inflation is effectively tamed, projected to sit at a negligible 0.4% in 2025 and 0.5% in 2026. This price stability gives the Swiss National Bank the breathing room to maintain its current policy course, shielding local consumers from the volatility rocking global markets. While the world grapples with trade wars, the Swiss domestic market stands as a defiant outlier, insulatedâfor nowâfrom the worst of the external storm.
The Geneva-based World Trade Organization (WTO) faces an existential crisis as the US rewrites the playbook on international commerce. "Trump couldnât care less about whatever rules there have been in the WTO," asserts CĂ©dric Dupont of the Graduate Institute Geneva. The approach is purely transactional and bilateral, bypassing the very institution designed to prevent this chaos. Former Swiss Ambassador Didier Chambovey puts it bluntly: "The US is acting as if it were not a WTO member."
This breakdown of the multilateral system leaves Switzerland, a nation dependent on open markets and clear rules, in a precarious position. While WTO Director General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala pleads for the organization to be a "space for dialogue," the reality on the ground is a free-for-all. With the US imposing tariffs on allies and rivals with impunity, the era of predictable trade is over. Switzerland must now navigate a world where economic might makes right, and the referee has been sidelined.