Poverty in Switzerland


Poverty in Switzerland refers to people who are living in relative poverty in Switzerland. In 2018, 7.9% of the population or some 660,000 people in Switzerland were affected by income poverty. Switzerland has also a significant number of working poor, estimated at 145,000 in 2015.
Historically, Switzerland has been a poor country, especially the Alpine regions. From the 17th century, incipient industrialisation brought wealth to the cities, particularly to Zürich, but rural areas remained destitute well into the 19th century, causing the peasant war in 1653, and later forcing families to emigrate both to Russia and the Americas.
In the 20th century, the economy of modern Switzerland came to establish itself among the world's most prosperous and stable, and in terms of human development index Switzerland ranks first worldwide. As of 2019, Switzerland had the highest average wealth per adult, at $564,653.

General statistics on income and wealth

In 2013 the mean household income in Switzerland was CHF 120,624, the mean household income after social security, taxes and mandatory health insurance was CHF 85,560. The OECD lists Swiss household gross adjusted disposable income per capita US$32,594 PPP for 2011.
As of 2016, Switzerland had the highest average wealth per adult, at $561,900. The top 1% richest persons own 35% of all the wealth in Switzerland, and this disparity has been increasing in recent years according to official statistics.
This development was tied to the exchange rate between the US Dollar and the Swiss franc, which caused capital in Swiss francs to more than double its value in dollar terms during the 2000s and especially in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, without any direct increase in value in terms of domestic purchasing power.
Switzerland has the comparatively high Gini coefficient of 0.8, similar to the US and Denmark, indicating unequal distribution. The high average wealth is explained by a comparatively high number of individuals who are extremely wealthy; the median wealth of a Swiss adult is five times lower than the average, at US$100,900.

Poverty

Switzerland has a significant number of working poor, estimated at 145,000 in 2015. This number is out of a total of approximately 570,000 people living in poverty. This number shows a slight increase from 2014 when it was 6.6%. In the same year, 8.9% of the population was making less than 50% of the median equalised income, with 4.5% making less than 40%.
There exists several groups who are at higher risk of poverty. They include those in a household where no one was gainfully employed, single adults living alone, single parent households with children and those without any optional schooling. Resident foreigners had a higher rate than Swiss citizens, with those from outside Europe having a poverty risk nearly twice that of citizens.

Compared to neighboring countries

As of 2016, Switzerland has a lower rate of people making 50% of the median equalised income than the European Union, United Kingdom and Germany, but a higher rate than countries such as Finland, France and Austria. The following chart provides information on the percentage and total numbers of the total population at risk for poverty, the employed who are at risk for poverty and the 50% level for each country in equivalent purchasing power.
NationPercentagePeople
Employed % Employed % Threshold amount
Single Person
Serbia19.31,35512.512.32,628
Romania19.23,80431.218.62,397
Bulgaria16.51,18113.511.63,372
Lithuania15.94599.18.74,639
Spain15.57,11418.313.17,587
Greece15.31,62919144,414
Latvia14.42808.58.54,599
Italy148,50013.311.48,267
Croatia13.55588.55.54,414
Estonia13.11707.49.95,930
Portugal131,3411210.85,357
Poland11.14,16310.910.95,425
European Union 10.954,69912.19.6N/A
Euro area 10.835,98412.79.5N/A
Luxembourg10.35913.11214,051
United Kingdom9.96,3918.48.68,760
Germany9.77,931149.510,605
Sweden9.4929166.810,353
Switzerland8.97288.77.313,544
Belgium8.69704.64.710,410
Cyprus8.37010.28.47,993
Slovenia8.216676.17,750
Austria8.170012.48.311,262
Slovakia8.14262.76.55,254
Hungary7.87528.69.74,194
Malta7.7333.65.78,462
Norway6.935723.35.914,308
Denmark6.838721.35.310,560
France6.84,26912.8810,375
Netherlands6.61,1047.15.610,497
Czech Republic5.35433.13.86,257
Finland4.92634.83.19,883
Ireland8.84115.84.88,852
Iceland5.51710.6710,039
FYR Macedonia15.53217.78.82,278
Turkey15.511,86814.313.72,831

By age

Those of retirement age are almost twice as likely to be living below the poverty line than the rest of the population, especially if they lived alone. However, these statistics don't take into account assets which a person had saved or purchased while working. The number of retirement age people who could afford an unexpected expense was almost half of the national average. In fact, only 1.9% of retirees were unable to pay their bills on time, compared to 9.3% of 18 to 64 year olds.

History

COVID-19 pandemic

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic in Switzerland and the measures taken in response to it led to a recession, with many residents losing employment, income and wealth. In Geneva, a large-scale weekly distribution of food was organised, leading to thousands of people queuing for hours to receive a bag of basic staples. The scene attracted a lot of media attention in Geneva, throughout Switzerland and across the world, with journalists seizing on the scene as significant event given Geneva's status as one of the richest cities in the world. The recurring event led to a lot of comments by various politicians, experts and public figures, as well as on social media. Some commentators argued that this poverty was not a new phenomenon, was not exclusive to Geneva and was simply made more visible by the crisis. In other cities too, people queued for food, the absence of queues as large as those in Geneva being arguably due to differences in organisation of food distribution rather than needs, as well as lesser fear of arrest for undocumented people, although Geneva was probably the canton hardest hit by precarity before the coronavirus crisis. A survey conducted by Doctors without Borders and Geneva University Hospitals in which close to a third of the food parcel beneficiaries participated estimated that 60% of them lacked health insurance, with a diversity of socioeconomic profiles, including employed and unemployed people, as well as short time workers. Three quarters of people who queued were women, and around half were undocumented, a quarter were foreigners with residency permits, 5% were asylum seekers and 4% were Swiss citizens. The survey also found that members of the disadvantaged group were almost five times more exposed to the effects of COVID-19 due to problems such as cramped living conditions and reduced possibilities of getting treatment or a test.

Literature