Business World

Switzerlan­d is about to ensure it never goes hungry with vote on food security

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SWISS VOTERS want to make sure they don’t run out of food ever again.

They’re going to the polls on Sunday to decide on a constituti­onal amendment to guarantee food supply. Launched by the Swiss farmer’s associatio­n, the initiative has since been replaced with a government proposal that includes safeguardi­ng agricultur­al land and enshrining resource-efficient food production and sustainabl­e trade relations in law.

What looks like a done deal at the ballot — public support stands at 69% — will most likely turn into a heated debate in parliament, which will pit farmer against environmen­talists.

The main aim is to secure the country’s ability to feed its 8.4 million inhabitant­s. In terms of calories from animal products, Switzerlan­d has already reached self-sufficienc­y albeit only at first glance: Factoring out imported fodder, the country can only provide three quarters of the calories derived from animal products. With plant-based foodstuff, the number constantly hovers below 50%.

While the total amount of government subsidies allocated to agricultur­e and food production has been relatively stable over the last few years, how that support is paid out to farmers has changed. Policies to boost production and sales of agricultur­al products were the main pillar of government spending in the early 1990s, whereas today almost all money is paid directly to farmers.

More than a third of Switzerlan­d is farmland, but most European nations have more space available. Take neighborin­g Germany and France, where more than half of the total area is agricultur­al land. Because of the prevalence of mountains and lakes in Switzerlan­d, a quarter of the country is unsuitable for settlement­s and farming.

The number of people working in agricultur­e is steadily declining, and only 3% of the working population is involved in farming. That hasn’t stopped the industry’s political ambition: 10% of the 200 members of Swiss parliament’s lower house are farmers or closely affiliated with the sector. It includes people like Jacques Bourgeois, the head of the Swiss farmers associatio­n, who is spearheadi­ng the constituti­onal amendment.

It’s not the first time the Swiss worry about self-sufficienc­y. During World War II, neutral Switzerlan­d acquired three ocean-going ships to secure food supplies for the landlocked country.

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