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- <text id=91TT1819>
- <title>
- Aug. 19, 1991: Switzerland:Angst Rises in the Alps
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 19, 1991 Hostages:Why Now? Who's Next?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- SWITZERLAND
- Angst Rises In the Alps
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Marking its 700th birthday, Europe's most successful nation frets
- that in order to keep up it may have to abandon its splendid
- isolation
- </p>
- <p>By Frederick Painton and Adam Zagorin/Zurich--With reporting by
- Margaret Studer/Zurich and Ellen Wallace/Geneva
- </p>
- <p> Not even the Swiss can resist making disparaging remarks
- about themselves and their country. Poet Carl Spitteler claimed
- that if the Swiss had created the Alps, they would not have
- been so high. Playwright Friedrich Durrenmatt noted that his
- country's vaunted neutrality "makes me think of a virgin who
- earns her living in a bordello but wants to remain chaste." Not
- surprisingly, the Swiss celebrated the septicentennial of their
- confederation this month with restraint.
- </p>
- <p> "Seven hundred years, that's enough." So went the slogan
- of some 300 left-leaning intellectuals protesting ceremonies
- for a nation they consider too rich, too smug and too
- hypocritical to rate any respect for its age. Even the voters
- of the central Swiss cantons--loosely the equivalent of
- America's 13 original states--opted against any spectacular
- celebrations. They judged it an environmentally harmful and
- needless extravagance.
- </p>
- <p> The climax of the festivities took place this month in the
- Rutli meadow overlooking Lake Lucerne. The field can be reached
- only on foot, so the celebrators clambered up the bank of the
- lake to gather at the historic site where, according to legend,
- rebellious farmers from the founding cantons swore the first
- oath of Swiss allegiance in 1291. The backdrop was dramatic but
- fittingly modest: no parades down grand boulevards, just a
- nostalgic tribute by a modern industrial nation to its simpler,
- farming roots. When night fell, bonfires and fireworks lit the
- sky.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond a distaste for excess, the reluctance of the Swiss
- to indulge in a splashy birthday bash also reflects a country
- increasingly ill at ease with itself. The questions raised go
- to the very foundations of what made Switzerland exceptional--its status as an Alpine refuge protected from the wars and
- revolutions that have ravaged the rest of Europe through the
- centuries. The Swiss like to say they are less a nation than a
- conglomerate formed by disparate mountain people under pressure
- to defend themselves against outside threats--from the
- Habsburgs and the Bourbons to Hitler.
- </p>
- <p> Europe now is once again caught up in a period of rapid
- change, riding the dynamic toward ever closer unity. By the
- beginning of 1993, if all goes well, the 12 members of the
- European Community will have created a single market that, with
- 345 million people, rivals the U.S. in economic muscle. Far from
- prizing their traditional standoffishness, many of the 6 million
- Swiss are asking if they can afford to remain on the sidelines
- of this new Europe. Does neutrality still make sense as the risk
- of war in Europe recedes and the vision of a confederation
- stretching from the Atlantic to the Urals advances? Can
- Switzerland hope someday to join the E.C. and still retain its
- highly decentralized system of direct democracy?
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, Switzerland is a minimodel for the new
- confederal Europe. No melting pot here; instead it is a
- patchwork stitched together for common convenience--and
- prosperity--with each part retaining its distinctive culture
- and mores. There is no center, no dominating commercial or
- political capital. Power here is even more discreet than money,
- and like money in this richest of all European countries, it is
- spread around.
- </p>
- <p> The seat of federal government is in Bern, a medieval city
- of arcades, spires and fountains, full of politicians,
- government officials and farmers, whose open market in front of
- the gray-green stone parliament building is a reminder of the
- country's revered peasant past. A world away is Geneva, severe
- and handsome, with a touch of francophone chic, an international
- city, where summits are held and diplomatic deals are made.
- Solid, comfortable Zurich is at once the banking center and,
- along with Basel, at the bend of the Rhine, the cultural heart
- for German speakers.
- </p>
- <p> For all these varieties of Swiss, the temptation to march
- in the European parade is at hand, but it is far from clear
- whether Switzerland will succumb. Last June, in one of the most
- important referendums in years, a majority rejected adoption of
- a value-added tax, a reform that would have brought the Swiss
- fiscal system closer to that of its European neighbors. Says
- Christoph Blocher, Zurich industrialist and member of the
- federal parliament who is leading a campaign against E.C.
- membership: "If Switzerland joined, it would have a lot to lose:
- sovereignty, independence, democratic rights, neutrality and
- security, and it would suffer lower wages and higher taxes."
- </p>
- <p> The E.C.'s momentum confronts Switzerland with an
- immensely difficult choice: to join, thereby yielding some power
- to Brussels, and benefit directly from the dynamism of the new
- Europe, or to stay out and retain its jealously guarded
- independence. A third option involves the talks now under way
- with Brussels to create an economic area in which goods,
- services, capital and labor would flow freely, thereby according
- Switzerland many of the benefits of E.C. membership but without
- a loss of sovereignty. The price of that compromise is that
- Switzerland would not have a strong voice at the table where
- decisions affecting its future are made.
- </p>
- <p> Many businessmen and political leaders believe the greater
- risks lie in not joining. In the long run, they reason, the
- emerging new Europe will forge ahead, leaving Switzerland behind
- with a declining and aging population, still prosperous and
- tranquil but stagnating outside the mainstream of history. "The
- train is leaving," says Hans Baer of Zurich's Julius Baer Banks.
- </p>
- <p> Businessmen like Baer worry less about adverse economic
- effects than about the psychological and social impact of going
- it alone. If Switzerland stays outside the E.C., they say, Swiss
- students will lack the Europe-wide educational opportunities
- offered other European youth; Swiss scientific and industrial
- research might suffer from not joining in bigger projects.
- </p>
- <p> Although large Swiss multinationals like the engineering
- giant Asea Brown Boveri and food conglomerate Nestle have a
- global presence, scores of less dynamic firms do not and could
- find themselves at a competitive disadvantage. Even
- Switzerland's powerful banks and insurance companies will come
- under pressure as E.C.-based rivals operate in newly deregulated
- markets. "We must look at Switzerland as if it is a
- corporation," says the head of the economy department,
- Jean-Pascal Delamuraz. "How competitive are we? Perhaps we have
- been successful for too long. Perhaps we have lost a little of
- our dynamism."
- </p>
- <p> For the time being, that is not evident. By most
- standards, the country can claim to be Europe's most successful
- society. Its citizens work longer hours, save more money and
- invest more, privately, in research and development than any of
- its neighbors, including the Germans. The payoff has been
- generous. In 1989 the GNP per capita was $30,270, the highest
- in Europe (and 43% above the U.S. level). Unemployment, at 1.1%
- of the work force, is virtually nonexistent. By comparison,
- unemployment in France currently stands at 9.5%; in Germany, at
- 6.3%.
- </p>
- <p> Slowly, though, the Swiss are becoming more like other
- Europeans. The majority that opposed a reduction in the working
- week from 42 to 40 hours is eroding because more and more,
- life-style is taking priority over industriousness. Church
- attendance is dropping in a country once exceptional for its
- piety. Even the country's citizen army, a hallowed symbol of
- national identity capable of fielding one of the largest and
- best-equipped forces in Europe, has lost public esteem. In a
- referendum two years ago, 35.6% voted to abolish the armed
- forces.
- </p>
- <p> The Swiss have also discovered they are not immune to the
- social ills that afflict others. The country has Europe's
- highest incidence of AIDS and a rising drug-related crime
- problem. In Zurich's Platzspitz, a sordid, officially sanctioned
- Needle Park nestles only a few minutes' walk from the banking
- district where the city's fabled gnomes control the levers of
- the national economy. Narcotics are sold openly amid the
- greenery, while dazed, long-haired youths inject themselves
- using free syringes provided by Zurich's local government in a
- controversial program to control AIDS.
- </p>
- <p> To many reformers, Europe appears as a potential remedy to
- a system of government so decentralized that it is often
- paralyzed in the face of change. Each of the country's 26
- cantons enjoys virtual autonomy on everything from traffic
- regulations to taxes and schooling. Those favoring change also
- argue that it might fix an apathy problem that stands out in
- Europe (though it would not in the U.S.). Only about 40% of
- Swiss voters go to the polls, compared with an average of 60%
- in the 1940s. Nicolas Hayek, who is credited with saving the
- country's watch industry from Japanese competition by promoting
- the immensely popular Swatch (80 million have been sold
- worldwide since the brand was launched nine years ago),
- complains, "We used to be a mountain people who got things done.
- Now we are stagnating in a system that demands consensus above
- all else."
- </p>
- <p> The rest of Europe can't help wondering what the fuss is
- all about at a time when Swiss accomplishments seem more
- relevant than ever. Last January Germans were asked what nation
- they most admired. Forty percent chose Switzerland. Six months
- earlier, then Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze had
- sent an official delegation to Bern to study Swiss democratic
- federalism as a possible solution to the gathering movements of
- national independence in his country.
- </p>
- <p> The Swiss are very aware--arguably too aware--of what
- they have achieved, and for this reason, they do not for the
- present seem ready to gamble away a 700-year-old success story.
- But for the first time in this century, they must at least
- begin to contemplate an alternative destiny.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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