Despite Switzerland's current economic resilience, Jan-Egbert Sturm, director of the KOF economic research institute, warns that prosperity is under threat from the war in the Middle East, which is disrupting supply chains and price trends. The full consequences have yet to be felt by Swiss companies.

"The longer the war lasts, the more we will feel the consequences."
"Our economic growth is better than many expected."
Switzerland is currently outperforming its peers with a solid 0.5% GDP growth recorded in the first quarter of 2026, but this resilience is a fragile mask. Jan-Egbert Sturm, the director of the prestigious KOF economic research institute at ETH Zurich, issues a stark warning: the nation's prosperity is under direct fire. While the Alpine nation has historically weathered global storms better than most, the sheer scale of current Middle Eastern hostilities is creating a delayed-action bomb for Swiss industry. The 'Swiss exception' is being tested as never before. We are currently operating in a window of deceptive calm, yet the underlying foundations of our welfare are vibrating from external shocks. Sturm notes that while growth exceeded expectations, the full force of the geopolitical storm has yet to make landfall on Swiss shores. This is not a drill; it is a countdown to a significant economic recalibration that could redefine Swiss wealth for the next decade.
The Strait of Hormuz remains the world's most critical energy artery, and its potential closure is a nightmare scenario for Swiss supply chains. A staggering percentage of the world's oil and gas flows through this narrow passage, and any sustained interruption hits Asia first before ricocheting into the European heartland. Switzerland, despite its landlocked geography, is deeply integrated into these global networks. Sturm emphasizes that it will be a 'long time' before Middle Eastern energy production can return to full capacity even if hostilities cease today. This disruption isn't just about fuel; it's about the entire architecture of global trade. When the flow of energy stutters, the cost of every imported component for Swiss precision manufacturing skyrockets. The delay in feeling these effects is not a sign of safety, but a warning of the magnitude of the coming pressure. Swiss companies must now grapple with a reality where 'just-in-time' delivery is replaced by 'just-in-case' survival strategies.
Inflation in Switzerland is projected to hit a critical 2% this year, pushing the Swiss National Bank’s target range to its absolute limit. While 2% might seem modest compared to global neighbors, for the Swiss economy—built on the bedrock of price stability—it represents a dramatic shift in consumer purchasing power. Rising petrol prices are the primary engine of this ascent, driving up transport costs that are being aggressively passed on to the end consumer. As the price of essential products soars, a chilling effect is taking hold: consumers are forced to slash spending in other sectors to compensate. This reduction in demand creates a vicious cycle for local businesses. The SNB now faces a high-stakes balancing act to keep inflation within its 0%-2% corridor without stifling the very growth that has kept the country afloat. The era of ultra-low inflation is evaporating, replaced by a volatile environment where every centime counts.
A dangerous wage-price spiral is no longer a theoretical risk; it is becoming a looming reality for Swiss employers. As the cost of living climbs, workers are beginning to demand higher wages to maintain their standard of living, which in turn forces companies to raise prices further to cover increased payroll costs. Sturm warns of these 'secondary impact effects' that could entrench inflation far longer than the initial energy shock. This creates a structural threat to Swiss competitiveness on the global stage. If the cost of Swiss labor and production rises too sharply, the 'Made in Switzerland' premium may no longer be enough to sustain export volumes. The prosperity we take for granted is anchored in a delicate equilibrium between high wages and high productivity. If that balance is disrupted by a prolonged conflict in the Middle East, the very fabric of the Swiss social contract could be stretched to its breaking point. The message from KOF is clear: the time for complacency has passed; the time for strategic adaptation is now.