Federal finances The National Council cuts funding for Swiss aid abroad

SDA

4.12.2024 - 09:18

The National Council wants to make less money available for Swiss aid abroad next year than the Federal Council. (theme picture)
The National Council wants to make less money available for Swiss aid abroad next year than the Federal Council. (theme picture)
Keystone

Switzerland is to have less money available for aid abroad in 2025. The National Council has cut the budget for international cooperation by CHF 250 million in favor of the army, against the opposition of the SP, Greens, GLP and EVP.

Keystone-SDA

On Wednesday, the National Council resumed its deliberations on the 2025 budget. It first decided on the budget items for international cooperation. The cuts had been requested by the conservative majority of the committee. The Left and the GLP opposed the cuts totaling CHF 250 million in vain.

The Council cut the credit for bilateral development cooperation by CHF 147.7 million and that for multilateral organizations by CHF 52.3 million. It approved CHF 50 million less than the Federal Council for economic cooperation at the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (Seco).

Setting new priorities

The changed geopolitical situation requires new priorities, said Pius Kaufmann (center/LU). Speaking on behalf of the SVP parliamentary group, Andreas Gafner (EDU/BE) said that the security of the population in Switzerland must come first. It was not about cuts, but about less growth in expenditure.

The cuts were acceptable, said Alex Farinelli (FDP/TI). The funds for international development aid had increased, more than all other federal expenditure. Conversely, spending on national defense had been reduced, not least in favor of international cooperation.

The SP, Greens, GLP and EVP opposed the cuts in vain. They were at the expense of individual country programs and multinational cooperation, said Corina Gredig (GLP/ZH) and warned of reputational damage.

"Extremely dangerous in terms of security policy"

In terms of security policy, the cuts are extremely dangerous," warned Cédric Wermuth (SP/AG) and spoke of a "devastating signal to the outside world". With the majority proposals, Beijing and Moscow could expand their influence in the global South.

Gerhard Andrey (Greens/FR) recalled the importance of maintaining international relations and the credibility of neutral Switzerland. This made the Ukraine summit on the Bürgenstock possible, for example. "Development policy and security policy should not be played off against each other," said Marc Jost (EPP/BE).

The GLP and EVP unsuccessfully requested that the credits for international cooperation be left at the level of the Federal Council. The SP and the Greens tried in vain to earmark more funds for international cooperation.

Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter did not want any increases. At the same time, however, she pointed out that certain projects could not be implemented with the short-term cuts requested by the majority.