Parliament has decided to abolish trade barriers for products licensed in European Union countries in an effort to lower prices for consumer goods.
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The regulations apply mainly to cosmetics, clothes, textiles, furniture and foodstuffs under the so-called Cassis de Dijon rule.
Both chambers on Thursday managed to iron out the final differences and agreed to give the Federal Health Office a say in the sale of food imported from the EU.
The government said the reform would boost competition, trigger economic growth and result in savings of about SFr2 billion ($1.9 billion) a year.
The Greens and the rightwing Swiss People’s Party spoke out against the amendment, arguing Switzerland should not introduce a rule without winning similar pledges from the EU.
Earlier this week parliament also agreed to adopt EU rules on product safety.
swissinfo.ch with agencies
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