Business World

Swiss vote decisively in favor of ‘13th month’ pension increase

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ZURICH — Switzerlan­d voted decisively to increase pension payments for the elderly in a referendum, as concern over living costs and support for a stronger social safety net trumped questions about how to afford it.

Provisiona­l official results published by the government showed over 58% of voters backed the extra pension, a 13th monthly payment per year, with less than 42% against, a more emphatic victory than final polls had suggested.

The measure, which was promoted by the Swiss Trade Union Federation and left-ofcenter parties, also needed the backing of a majority of Switzerlan­d’s 26 cantons to pass. Most supported it, with opposition strongest in lower-tax cantons.

“This step is really a huge milestone from a union perspectiv­e,” Lukas Golder of polling firm gfs.bern told SRF.

The government, business lobbies and parliament, which currently leans to the right, had rejected the proposal as financiall­y unsound. Swiss voters have in the past been cautious about backing measures viewed as risky for business.

The pension vote contrasts with referenda in recent decades in which Switzerlan­d clearly rejected proposals that would have shortened the working week and given people more holidays.

Concern about the cost of living is widespread in the wealthy country. Zurich, Switzerlan­d’s biggest conurbatio­n, tied with Singapore as the world’s most expensive city in a study published in November by the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit.

Mery, a 65-year-old Zurich voter, said increased pension payments made sense. “I’m retired now and so obviously I would like a bit more,” she said, declining to give her full name. “It should allow me to give a little something to my grandchild­ren.”

It is not clear how the pension boost, which should take effect from 2026, will be funded. Opponents say it could spark tax hikes or spending cuts, and weigh on younger Swiss.

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