Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Swiss Voters Draw A Line On Taxing Heirs To Fund Climate Policy


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Swiss voters have just delivered a lesson in how far a wealthy democracy is willing to go on taxing the rich for climate goals – and where it quietly says“enough.”

In a nationwide vote on 30 November, around 78% of voters rejected a plan to tax inheritances and large gifts above 50 million Swiss francs at 50%. It was not a narrow escape; it was a crash.

The proposal came from the youth wing of the Social Democratic Party. Their argument was emotionally powerful and easy to print on posters: a tiny group of ultra-wealthy heirs would fund climate and energy-transition projects for everyone else.

Only the portion of inheritances above 50 million francs would be taxed, and the money would be earmarked for green investments at federal and cantonal level.

But beneath that simple story lay a much more complicated reality that Swiss voters know well. Switzerland has no federal inheritance tax today and relies heavily on mobile, high-income taxpayers, global family offices and closely held companies.



Many cantons already have their own inheritance rules, often light or zero for close relatives. Layering a steep federal tax on top of that raised a red flag for people who worry about competitiveness and legal stability.
Swiss reject wealth taxes for climate funding
Business owners and banks warned that the measure could push wealthy residents and successful family companies to move assets, headquarters or entire households abroad.

Some entrepreneurs said they would relocate rather than risk handing half of a lifetime's work to the taxman on succession. For a country that sells itself as a predictable, business-friendly hub in the heart of Europe, that prospect mattered more than a new climate fund.

The result was striking even in big cities that usually lean towards more redistribution. Voters did not reject climate action; they rejected a tool that looked punitive, experimental and hard to control once introduced.

For expats and foreigners, the significance goes beyond Swiss domestic politics. The vote shows that even in a rich, globally connected country, there is a clear limit to wealth and inheritance taxation.

Switzerland is signalling that it prefers to pay for its climate transition through broad-based policies and economic growth, rather than by turning heirs into a permanent political target.

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The Rio Times

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