Employment indicator drops to 2.6 points in early 2025, with manufacturing and retail sectors particularly affected by downsizing plans.

"The indicator for the manufacturing industry continues its exploration of the abyss."
Switzerlandâs once-overheated job market is rapidly losing steam. In a stark revelation for early 2025, the renowned KOF employment indicator has slumped to a precarious 2.6 points. This is not a sudden glitch; it represents an uninterrupted erosion of confidence that has plagued the market since the third quarter of 2022. We are witnessing a definitive shift in the economic landscape.
The data, released by the Centre for Business Cycle Research in Zurich, paints a sobering picture. The index is now dangerously close to its long-term average of 1.5 pointsâa threshold that signals the end of the post-pandemic hiring boom. Experts from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETHZ) warn that the momentum is gone. As companies brace for uncertainty, the aggressive recruitment drives of the past two years are being replaced by hiring freezes and strategic downsizing. The message is clear: the Swiss economy is tapping the brakes, and the workforce is beginning to feel the jolt.
Nowhere is the pain more acute than in Switzerland's industrial heartland. The manufacturing sector is currently grappling with a staggering employment indicator of -12.4%. This is not merely a dip; it is what analysts are calling an "exploration of the abyss." The sector has been languishing in negative territory since mid-2023, but these latest figures suggest a deepening crisis.
While the Swiss brand is built on precision and production, the reality on the factory floor is grim. Downsizing plans are becoming the norm rather than the exception. The contagion is spreading beyond the assembly lines, infecting the wholesale and hospitality sectors. A majority of surveyed companies in catering and hotels are now actively considering workforce reductions. As global demand softens and operational costs remain high, these foundational pillars of the Swiss economy are being forced to shed weight to stay afloat.
In a move that defies traditional logic, corporate success no longer guarantees job security. The banking sector has delivered a harsh reality check: profitability does not protect the workforce. Julius Baer, a titan of Swiss private banking, has announced plans to slash 400 jobs. This decision comes despite the group reporting a significant boost in profits for the previous year.
This paradox highlights a ruthless efficiency drive sweeping through the financial centers of Zurich and Geneva. Companies are decoupling financial performance from headcount, opting to trim operations even when balance sheets are healthy. It sends a chilling signal to white-collar workers across the confederation: performance is no shield against restructuring. As automation and digital transformation accelerate, even the most prestigious financial institutions are recalibrating their human capital needs with cold precision.
Amidst the gloom of downsizing and industrial contraction, a few bastions of resilience remain. The Swiss economy is not collapsing; it is bifurcating. In stark contrast to the manufacturing slump, the construction and insurance sectors stand as the last lines of defense for job seekers. According to the latest ETHZ data, a majority of firms in these industries are still projecting net hiring for 2025.
Construction cranes continue to dot the skylines, and insurance providers are expanding their rosters to meet enduring demand. These service providers are currently absorbing some of the shocks from the wider market, preventing a total freefall in employment figures. However, the question remains: can these specific sectors carry the weight of the entire labor market? For now, they offer a glimmer of hope, but the gap between the thriving and the struggling sectors is widening at an alarming rate.