Google – AFP, Jonathan Fowler (AFP), 24 November 2013
Geneva —
Two-thirds of Swiss voters on Sunday rejected a referendum to cap executive pay
at 12 times the wage of a firm's lowest earner, according to provisional
results aired on local television.
The measure
had been expected to fail, but the debate has tapped into a vein of discontent
among Swiss voters who in March backed rules to rein in golden handshakes, in
the wake of high-profile exit payments to top bosses.
Dubbed the
"1:12" initiative after the legally-binding ratio it would set
between the top and bottom salaries in a firm, the plan met with stiff
opposition from Switzerland's business community and political right.
Ahead of
the vote, its critics issued stark warnings that inscribing salary restrictions
into the law would make the wealthy Alpine nation less competitive and break
with a Swiss tradition of limited official meddling in business.
"There's
a climate of mistrust towards those who make money," Jean-Claude Biver,
boss of high-end watchmaker Hublot, told the Swiss daily Le Temps.
Christoph
Darbellay, head of the centre-right Christian Democratic Party, told AFP he
could understand disquiet over "undeserved salaries".
But voting
Yes would be tantamount to "shooting ourselves in the foot", he
insisted.
Switzerland's
cross-party government had urged a No vote, saying a 1:12 law would dent tax
revenues and scare off foreign firms.
Switzerland,
which has long boasted a business-friendly climate coupled with one of the
highest average salaries in the world, has largely avoided the economic crisis
dogging the European Union, of which it is a staunch non-member.
The
referendum campaign was spearheaded by the Socialist Party, plus the Greens and
trade unions.
They
rejected the criticism, arguing that it was time to clip the wings of the
vastly overpaid, and underlining that an informal ratio of around 1:12 was the
norm as late as 1998, before things went awry.
Under the
direct democracy which is the core of the Swiss political system, the
campaigners were able to put the issue to a plebiscite by collecting more than
100,000 signatures.
The debate
led to intense scrutiny of bosses' pay packets, which the 1:12 proponents said
were an average 43 times higher in 2011 than those on the bottom of the ladder.
According
to 2012 figures published by the campaigners, the then boss of pharmaceutical
giant Novartis made 219 times the lowest salary.
At banking
group UBS, the lowest-paid employee would have had to work 194 years to make
the same amount the head of its investment bank raked in 12 months.
The chief
executive of rival bank Credit Suisse enjoyed a ratio of 1:191.
And at
insurer Swiss Life -- whose chief is also treasurer of the Economie Suisse
trade and industry lobby -- it was 1:60.
To hammer
their message home, the campaigners plastered Switzerland with posters showing
a single hamburger next to a towering stack of a dozen, reading: "12 times
more salary, that's enough".
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