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€18 minimum wage? No thanks, say Swiss

Only 23 percent of Swiss voters came out in favour of introducing a minimum wage of €18, according to a projection of today’s referendum results.

SWISS VOTERS HAVE rejected a proposed hourly minimum wage of €18 (22 Swiss francs) – which would have been the world’s highest — in one of the planet’s priciest nations, a polling agency said.

Only 23 percent of Swiss voters came out in favour of introducing a minimum wage in Switzerland so high it could pass for mid-management pay elsewhere, the gfs.bern polling institute said in a projection of today’s referendum results.

Voters also appeared likely to nix a multi-billion-dollar deal, a decade in the making, to buy fighter jets from Sweden, while they overwhelmingly supported measures to ban paedophiles from working with children.

Much of the national debate ahead of the referendums, which are held every three months in Switzerland as part of the country’s direct democratic system, has focused on the pros and cons of introducing a minimum wage.

The “Decent Salary” initiative insists that at least €18 an hour, or €3,280 a month, is needed to get by in the wealthy Alpine nation.

Backers of the initiative want Switzerland to go from having no minimum wage to boasting the world’s highest, far above the hourly €8.65 paid here.

Threat to businesses

But the initiative, which has drawn envious and incredulous attention from abroad, appeared sure to flop, with voters heeding warnings from opponents, including the government, that the sky-high minimum wage would deal a death blow to many businesses and would weaken Switzerland’s healthy economy.

“This minimum wage would put jobs in danger and would make accessing the labour market even more difficult for youths and those with few qualifications,” Bern has warned.

Supporters counter that higher basic wages would boost the purchasing power of some 330,000 people, or one in 10 employees in the country.

People working in sales, services and farming, or as hairdressers and flight attendants, for instance, generally earn far less than the proposed minimum wage.

“I really have trouble living on my salary,” Portuguese hotel maid Alcina Esteves de Almeida told AFP, whose gross monthly salary is 3,400 francs.

“I have to give up a lot, and I often can’t eat properly,” said the 52-year-old, who works at a luxury Geneva hotel.

Like de Almeida, around 90 percent of those living on less than the proposed minimum wage are foreign nationals, without a right to vote in Sunday’s referendum, an editorial in the Le Temps daily’s weekly edition noted.

 © AFP, 2014

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