Swiss Employers Propose New Anti-Wage Dumping Measures
Swiss Employers' Association director outlines strict measures including work bans and payment freezes to prevent wage dumping under new EU treaties.
Swiss Employers' Association director outlines strict measures including work bans and payment freezes to prevent wage dumping under new EU treaties.

"We are also discussing strengthening the Bau-Card instrument, which is to a certain extent an accreditation for companies in the construction industry that proves that they adhere to all the rules."
"I assume that we will find solutions in many areas."
Swiss employers are no longer playing defense; they are going on the offensive. In a bold move to safeguard Switzerland's high wage standards against the backdrop of new EU treaties, Roland Müller, director of the Swiss Employers' Association, has unveiled a suite of aggressive enforcement mechanisms. The message is crystal clear: comply or face immediate expulsion.
At the heart of this proposal lies the implementation of strict work bans for any foreign entity that demonstrably flouts Swiss labor rules. But Müller is taking it a step further with a financial stranglehold. He proposes a controversial "payment freeze," effectively empowering Swiss clients to refuse payment on invoices from European companies caught engaging in wage dumping. This creates an immediate, severe economic consequence for violators, moving beyond bureaucratic slaps on the wrist to hit dumping companies exactly where it hurts—their revenue stream. These measures represent a significant hardening of Switzerland's stance as it navigates the complex waters of Bilaterals III.
Nowhere is the threat of wage dumping more palpable than in the construction industry, and the Employers' Association is responding with a digital fortress. Müller is championing the strengthening of the "Bau-Card," a critical instrument designed to act as a gatekeeper for the sector. This is not merely an ID card; it is a mandatory accreditation system that serves as irrefutable proof that a company adheres to every single Swiss regulation.
"We are also discussing strengthening the Bau-Card instrument," Müller asserted in a recent interview, framing it as a non-negotiable standard for market entry. By mandating this accreditation, Switzerland effectively raises the drawbridge, ensuring that only those who play by the rules can access the lucrative Swiss construction market. This move aligns the employers with trade unions, creating a rare united front dedicated to maintaining the integrity of Swiss wages against undercutting from cross-border competitors.
The scale of this diplomatic and economic undertaking is staggering. Behind closed doors, a relentless series of negotiations has been unfolding, with social partners and the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) locking horns in over 50 separate meetings. This is not a casual dialogue; it is a grueling marathon to define the technical realities of wage protection under the new European framework.
The discussions are granular, focusing on the "proportionality of measures"—a diplomatic way of asking how hard Switzerland can strike against violators without shattering the delicate Bilaterals III agreement. Despite the intensity, Müller remains confident. "I assume that we will find solutions in many areas," he stated, signaling that while the process is exhaustive, a consensus is within reach. This sheer volume of high-level meetings underscores the critical importance the Swiss administration places on getting this right before the ink dries on any treaty.
While the Employers' Association welcomes the broader agreement with the EU, they have drawn a definitive line in the sand. Support for the new bilateral agreements is conditional, not guaranteed. Müller issued a stern warning: the association will withdraw its backing if the measures result in interventions in the flexible labor market that are unrelated to EU posting companies.
This distinction is vital. Switzerland's economic engine relies on its liberal labor laws, and employers are unwilling to sacrifice domestic flexibility at the altar of European integration. The proposed anti-dumping measures must be surgical—targeting specific violators—rather than a blunt instrument that stifles the broader economy. As Switzerland moves forward, the Employers' Association stands as a vigilant guardian, ready to veto any deal that compromises the structural advantages of the Swiss labor market.