Summary: Despite the wage protection compromise with 14 domestic measures, critics fear increased wage pressure from expanded free movement of persons. The trade unions are divided: while the SGB and Travail.Suisse support the compromise, there are critical voices within the trade union movement. The SVP fundamentally opposes free movement of persons.
Free movement of persons allows EU citizens to work in Switzerland. With a wage level significantly above the EU average, there are fears that cheaper foreign workers may put Swiss wages under pressure [1][8].
Critics argue specifically:
The trade unions played a key role in the failed InstA in 2021: their opposition to the planned weakening of the flanking measures was a major factor in the negotiation termination [5].
Under the Bilateral Agreements III, the trade unions are divided [8][10]:
| Actor | Position | Justification |
|---|---|---|
| SGB | Conditional approval | Wage protection compromise fulfilled as condition [8] |
| Travail.Suisse | Conditional approval | "Acceptable compromise", but Parliament must not water it down [10] |
| Unia (individual voices) | Critical | Wage protection insufficient, monitoring mechanisms underfunded |
Critics within the trade union movement argue [8]:
Beyond the fundamental debate on the 14 measures, there are specific changes to the posting of workers system that are criticised by trade unions:
Under the previous system of flanking measures, cantons could require foreign posting companies to provide a deposit to enforce fines and back-payments in case of violations. With the alignment to the EU Posting of Workers Directive, this option is largely eliminated. Trade unions argue that this considerably complicates enforcement against non-compliant EU posting companies, as no securities remain after a contract is completed [11].
The previous 8-day notification period for posted workers is reduced to 4 days. Trade unions and cantonal labour market inspectorates fear the shortened period gives authorities less time to prepare inspections and reduces their effectiveness [11].
Supporters counter that the shorter period corresponds to the EU standard and that modern digital notification systems enable faster processing [5].
The debate around Measure 14 (dismissal protection) illustrates the fault line between trade unions and employers:
| Actor | Position on Measure 14 |
|---|---|
| SGB/Unia | Protection insufficient; applies only to 2% of companies (50+ employees) [8] |
| economiesuisse | Intervention in flexible labour market acceptable as compromise [7] |
| Swissmem | Supports compromise, warns against tightening in parliament [7] |
| Travail.Suisse | Acceptable compromise, provided parliament does not water it down [10] |
The SVP fundamentally opposes free movement of persons and has launched a popular initiative to terminate free movement of persons (vote scheduled for 14 June 2026). It argues that no domestic mechanism can effectively prevent wage pressure under open free movement of persons [8].
Supporters emphasise that the wage protection compromise of the 14 measures represents a historic agreement of the social partners (-> Wage Protection Compromise) [10]:
Free movement of persons has existed since 2002. Empirical studies show that the feared massive wage pressure has overall not materialised -- the flanking measures have proven fundamentally effective [5][7].
The adoption of Measure 14 would remove Switzerland from the "black list" of the International Labour Organisation (ILO), on which it has been listed for over 20 years due to insufficient dismissal protection for employee representatives [10].
[1] UNSER RECHT (2026). Bilateral III -- what is it about? Information platform. [Open Access]
[5] FDFA (2026). Switzerland-EU Package (Bilateral III). Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. [Open Access]
[7] economiesuisse (2026). Bilateral III -- The best option. Dossier Politik. [Open Access] Note: Business federation.
[8] SGB (2026). No to the SVP chaos initiative. Swiss Trade Union Federation. [Open Access] Note: Trade union.
[9] admin.ch (2026). Wage protection: Measure 14. Swiss Confederation. [Open Access]
[10] Travail.Suisse (2026). Agreement between social partners on 14 measures. Travail.Suisse. [Open Access] Note: Employee organisation.
[11] SVP (2025). Consultation Response on the CH-EU Package. Swiss People's Party. [Open Access] Note: Largest opposition party.
Last updated: March 2026