Summary: The Bilateral Agreements III end the ongoing erosion of existing agreements and create a stable, updated legal framework. Planning certainty for business is strengthened through clear rules on dispute settlement and legal adaptation. Critics counter that this stability comes at the price of a loss of sovereignty.
The existing Bilateral Agreements I (1999) and II (2004) are based on static law: they reflect the state of EU law at the time of signing and have not been substantially updated since then (see Erosion of the Treaties). The result is a gradual devaluation [1][4]:
The Bilateral Agreements III halt this erosion through dynamic law adoption: the agreements are continuously adapted to the current state of EU law [1][3].
The Bilateral Agreements III create a binding legal framework with clear rules [3][5]:
| Element | Benefit for business |
|---|---|
| Dynamic law adoption | Regulatory status is automatically kept up to date -- no gradual devaluation [3] |
| Dispute settlement | Binding arbitration procedure instead of political deadlock (see Dispute Settlement) [3] |
| Package approach | Indivisible package rather than individual agreements that can be played off against each other [1] |
| Safeguard clauses | Permanent exceptions and safeguard clauses in the AFMP remain in place [1][5] |
The Federal Council emphasises the difference between the previous "autonomous adoption" and the new dynamic law adoption [6]:
"The 'autonomous adoption' is in the interest of the Swiss economy, as it makes it possible to minimise regulatory divergences vis-a-vis the most important trading partner."
"Unlike the bilateral agreements, however, 'autonomous adoption' does not guarantee access to the EU single market, as it is not recognised by the EU." [6]
The Bilateral Agreements III formalise this adoption that is already practised in any case -- and in return secure market access contractually [4][6].
Critics argue that legal certainty is purchased at the cost of a loss of sovereignty (see Loss of Sovereignty) [2]:
autonomiesuisse argues that Switzerland can bear the erosion costs and instead pursue domestic reforms -- independent market opening and regulatory modernisation would be more effective in the long term than institutional integration [2].
[1] EDA (2026). Paket Schweiz-EU (Bilaterale III). Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. [Open Access]
[2] UNSER RECHT (2026). Bilaterale III -- um was geht es? Information platform. [Open Access]
[3] EDA (2026). Faktenblatt: Institutionelle Elemente. Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. [Open Access]
[4] economiesuisse (2026). Bilaterale III -- Die beste Option. Dossier Politik. [Open Access] Note: Business umbrella organisation.
[5] Bundesrat (2026). Erläuternder Bericht zur Vernehmlassung. Swiss Confederation. [Open Access]
[6] Bundesrat (2020). Antwort auf Interpellation 20.4701: Autonomer Nachvollzug vs. dynamische Rechtsübernahme. Curia Vista. [Open Access]
Last updated: March 2026