Switzerland signed a free trade agreement with the EEC in 1972
The Research Center for Swiss Diplomatic Documents (TODIS) released a special file on Thursday to mark this fiftieth anniversary.
In a “milestone in history” for some commentators, Switzerland signed a free trade agreement with the European Economic Community (EEC) in Brussels on July 22, 1972. Swiss consular documents (Dodis) mark this fiftieth anniversary. The institutional question was already the topic.
It is a question of avoiding the economic fragmentation of Western Europe. But negotiators were moving into uncharted territory, Todis recalled. On the Swiss side, we perceive a “range of possible solutions” from “an issue close to membership” to a “normal trade agreement”.
Switzerland’s chief negotiator, Paul Jolles, director of the trade division of the Federal Department of Economics, summarizes the task: “The structure of Switzerland’s corporate participation in the integration process will be the most difficult problem. Fifty years later, this analysis is still valid, Todis notes.
No political integration
No global corporate solution was finally found. On July 22, 1972, the radical Federal Councilor Ernst Brucker signed an agreement that would “make no contribution to the political integration of Europe”. But the agreement excludes customs duties and sets competition rules for more than 90% of Swiss exports to the EEC.
Switzerland used the argument of the threat of rejection in the referendum to put pressure on the EEC within the framework of the negotiations, Todis explains. The Federal Council finally submits the Free Trade Agreement to a binding vote, which it considers to strengthen European cooperation in the long term. According to Socialist Federal Councilor Hans-Peter Zudy, “an irreversible development”.
“What not to say”
From this referendum on, European policy decisions will increasingly be submitted to the sovereign. The Federal Council is strengthening its communication policy. Not to preach, but for “preaching” reasons, he explains.
The Coordination Office, the organization responsible for relations with Brussels, gives the title to one of its announcements, Todis reveals: “What not to tell the public in information about the Switzerland-EEC agreement. ‘.
On December 3, 1972, the People and Provinces ratified the agreement by a 72.5% vote. “The European policy of the Federal Council has never acquired such legitimacy”, Sacha Zala summarizes. In a referendum on the EEA Agreement in December 1992, the people blocked further integration in Switzerland.
Before supporting a bidirectional route multiple times. A draft institutional framework agreement was abandoned last year. Since then, discussions with Brussels have resumed, but without any compromise on the popular institutional issue.
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