Swiss industrial group praises government’s US tariff initiative
President Swissmem praises Federal Council for initiative in USA
Keystone-SDA
Select your language
Generated with artificial intelligence.
Listening: Swiss industrial group praises government’s US tariff initiative
Swiss manufacturing lobby group Swissmem says it is satisfied with the government's response to the tariff war unleashed by United States President Donald Trump.
This content was published on
3 minutes
Keystone-SDA
Italiano
it
Presidente Swissmem elogia Consiglio federale per iniziativa in USA
Original
Swissmem president Martin Hirzel is “enthusiastic” about the initiatives of ministers Karin Keller-Sutter and Guy Parmelin in the United States this week.
The president of the employers’ organisation of the metal and electrical engineering industry was today the guest on Swiss public radio station SRF.
Federal President Keller-Sutter apparently found the right tone during direct talks in the US. And economics minister Parmelin also played an important role, Hirzel said on the public radio airwaves.
Furthermore, the head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs Ignazio Cassis on his trip to Japan and China this week was very clear: “Switzerland needs all markets and is open in all directions.”
Swiss investments
If indeed, as Keller-Sutter reported, Switzerland is one of the 15 countries with which the US administration wants to negotiate tariffs first, the two federal councillors have achieved a very positive result.
Hirzel also praised the two State Secretaries Helene Budliger Artieda (economy) and Martina Hirayama (education, research and innovation), who were also in Washington.
Hirzel believes that Swiss industrial companies already active in the US should “perhaps announce their investments in this country a little more strongly” than in the past. If Switzerland could explain its dual training system in the US, as the US itself apparently wants, it would be good for Switzerland.
Hirzel does not believe that the tariffs of 31% of the value of goods, announced by Trump for various Swiss products, will actually come into force. It would be “devastating” if Switzerland faced much higher tariffs than the EU.
What is your opinion? Join the debate:
External Content
Translated from Italian by DeepL/mga
How we work
We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools such as DeepL to translate them into English. A journalist then briefly reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication. Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.
Did you find this explanation helpful? Please fill out the short survey below to help us understand your needs.
External Content
Popular Stories
More
Aging society
No house generation: the impossibility of buying property in Switzerland
This content was published on
An unstable glacier above the Swiss village of Blatten has stopped breaking up, but there is still no question of lifting a landslide alert.
Swiss education chief wants fewer mobile phones in schools
This content was published on
The new head of the Swiss cantonal education authority would like to ban mobile phones in schools, apart from use in lessons.
Swiss regulator criticises banks for being lax with mortgages
This content was published on
Switzerland's financial watchdog has condemned a tendency for banks to apply less stringent internal guidelines for granting mortgage loans.
Uber drivers subject to the law on services in Geneva
This content was published on
The Federal Court has ruled against a Geneva-based company, a partner of Uber, which challenged its liability under the law on the hiring of services.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.