Bilateral Agreements I
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Agreement on Air Transport (Official
Compendium of Federal Laws, N°27, July 9, 2002, page 1705; RS 0.748.127.192.68)
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Agreement on Overland Transport (Official
Compendium of Federal Laws N°27, July 9, 2002, page 1649; RS 0.740.72)
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Agreement on Free Movement of Persons
(Official Compendium of Federal Laws, N°26, July 2, 2002, page 1529; RS
0.142.112.681).
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Agreement on Research (Official
Compendium of Federal Laws, N°29, July 23, 2002, page 1998; RS 0.420.513.1)
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Agreement on Public Procurement
Markets (Official Compendium of Federal Laws, N°29, July 23, 2002, page 1951; RS
0.172.052.68)
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Agreement on Agriculture (Official
Compendium of Federal Laws, N°30, July 30, 2002, page 2147; RS 0.916.026.81)
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Agreement on Technical Barriers to
Trade (Official Compendium of Federal Laws N°28, July 16, 2002, page 1803; RS
0.946.526.81)
Bilateral Agreements II
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Agreement on Taxation of Savings (Official
Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.642.026.81; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Agreement on Fight against Fraud (Official
Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.351.926.81; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Agreement on Cooperation in the
Fields of Justice, Police, Asylum and Migration (Schengen/Dublin) (Official
Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.360.268.1; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Agreement on Processed Agricultural
Products (Official Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.632.401.23; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Agreement on Environment (Official
Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.814.092.681; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm) greement on Statistics (Official
Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.431.026.81; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Agreement on Media (Official Federal
Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.784.405.226.8; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Agreement on Pensions (Official
Federal Gazette N°44, November 9, 2004; RS 0.672.926.81; see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
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Declaration of Intent on Education,
Occupational Training, Youth (see
www.europa.admin.ch/nbv/off/abkommen/f/index.htm)
1. Bilateral Agreements
I The Bilateral Agreements I between Switzerland and the European
Union cover the following areas: civil aviation, overland transport, the free
movement of persons, research, public procurement markets, agriculture and the
elimination of technical barriers to trade.
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The Agreement on Air Transport
The Agreement on Air Transport extends the so-called acquis communautaire to
Swiss airlines which will gradually be allowed access to the deregulated
European civil aviation market on a reciprocal basis.
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The Overland Transport
Agreement
The Overland Transport Agreement includes provisions for gradual opening by
Switzerland and the European Union of their respective road and rail transport
markets for both persons and goods on a reciprocal basis.
- The Agreement on Free
Movement of Persons
The Agreement on Free Movement of Persons gradually introduces freedom of
movement between Switzerland and the EU. The agreement covers not only workers
of all kinds but also the self-employed and persons without gainful employment,
provided they have sufficient financial means of their own.
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The Agreement on Research
The Agreement on Research gives Swiss research institutes, universities and
companies the right to full participation in all programs and activities of
the EU Framework Research Program.
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The Agreement on
Public Procurement Markets
The Agreement on Public Procurement Markets applies to the federal government,
the cantons and public sector companies active in the water, transport and
energy sectors. Its scope further extends to local authorities in the area of
telecommunications and rail transportation, as well as to private sector
companies operating on the basis of concessions or of a special or exclusive
right.
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The Agreement on Agriculture
The Agreement on Agriculture provides for improved access to agricultural
markets for certain products of particular interest (cheese, fruit and
vegetables).
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The Agreement on
Technical Barriers to Trade
The Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade calls for the mutual recognition
of tests, certificates and similar proof of conformity to established quality
standards for the vast majority of industrial products.
The seven agreements, limited to these specific areas, aim at enhancing the
relations between Switzerland and the EU and at facilitating market access for
both sides. The agreements were not self-executing and had to be incorporated
into Swiss and EU law. They were concluded as a package to take effect
simultaneously, and their implementation was individually supervised by joint
committees within which each of the two parties made rulings on a unanimous
basis. Each party was responsible for the implementation and application of the
agreements in its own territory. Thus, Switzerland made legislative changes,
amending many federal laws and ordinances and adopting new ones, which took
effect on the same date as the agreements. A revised EFTA Convention, extending the main provisions of the new bilateral
agreements to the EFTA States, also entered into force on June 1, 2002. As with
the bilateral agreements, various legal acts had to be amended or newly adopted
in order to accommodate its implementation. The Swiss people first approved the Bilateral Agreements I and the corresponding
implementation legislation in a national referendum on May 21, 2000. The
ratification process of the agreements within several Member States of the EU
delayed the originally planned schedule. However, since the agreements have come
into force on June 1, 2002, it is firmly believed that they will strengthen
Switzerland’s position as an economic centre and facilitate access to the EU’s
integrated market. The agreements were extended on May 1, 2004 to the ten new EU Member States,
with the exception of the Agreement on the Free Movement of persons, which is
the subject of new negotiations.
On October 26, 2004, the protocol to the Agreement on the Free Movement of
Persons was signed; this protocol extends the scope of the agreement to the new
EU Member States, envisaging separate transitional arrangements for these
countries.
2. Bilateral Agreements II
The Bilateral Agreements II and the declaration of intent between Switzerland
and the European Union cover the following areas: taxation of savings, fight
against fraud, cooperation in the fields of justice, police, asylum and
migration (Schengen/Dublin), processed agricultural products, environment,
statistics, media, pensions and education, occupational training, youth.
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Agreement on Taxation of
savings
The purpose of the Agreement on Taxation is to ensure that persons liable
for taxation within the EU will not be able to evade the directive adopted
by the EU for the taxation of savings by placing their savings in financial
centres outside the EU. Under the agreement negotiated with the EU,
Switzerland undertakes to impose a withholding tax on all income from
savings originating abroad, which will be effective for natural persons with
tax residency in an EU Member State. In addition, Switzerland undertakes to
provide administrative assistance on request to the EU Member States in
cases of tax fraud or similar serious offences. There will be no automatic
exchange of information between tax authorities. With the withholding tax
model, Switzerland is not attractive for attempts to avoid the EU directives
for the taxation of savings, while the Swiss legal system and banking
secrecy remain protected.
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Agreement on the Fight
against fraud
This bilateral agreement provides for an intensified collaboration between
Switzerland and the EU in combating offences in the area of indirect taxes (customs
duty, value added tax, consumer tax), subsidies and public procurement.
Stronger cooperation against criminal activity is as much a benefit for the
EU as it is for Switzerland. The EU benefits by being able to conduct the
fight against cigarette smuggling and other fraudulent activity more
efficiently, thereby avoiding revenue losses. Switzerland benefits as its
financial centre has no desire to be abused as a hub for fraudulent business
activities.
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Agreement on Cooperation in the Fields of Justice, Police, Asylum and
Migration (Schengen/Dublin)
The Bilateral Agreement in the Fields of Justice, Police, Asylum and
Migration (Schengen/Dublin) grants Switzerland access to the instruments for
cooperation on security and asylum within the EU, i.e. the Schengen/Dublin
security and asylum system, in which Norway and Iceland, non-Member States
of the EU, have also been participating since 1999. By abolishing the
controls of persons at the internal frontiers of the EU, the Schengen
Agreements permit the free movement of persons between EU Member States. The
Schengen Agreements also introduce measures to improve security, such as
stricter border controls at EU external borders and several cross-border
cooperation mechanisms, such as the Schengen Information System (SIS). The
Treaty of Dublin deals with asylum migration providing that asylum cases are
handled only by one EU state that is responsible for conducting all the
procedures in order to prevent repeated applications.
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Agreement on
Processed Agricultural Products
This bilateral agreement allows companies within the Swiss food industry to
make duty-free exports of a wide range of products to the EU market. This
enhanced competitiveness for the food processing industry opens up new
opportunities for Swiss agriculture. For the consumer, prices will tend to
fall as a result of a stronger competition. The Bilateral Agreement on
Processed Agricultural Products results in improvements in two specific
areas. The first one is the revision of the price compensation mechanism. As
a part of a simplified price compensation mechanism, the EU undertakes to
completely abolish its customs duties on Swiss products and also to waive
export subsidies. For its part, Switzerland will reduce its customs duties
and export subsidies or, in certain cases, will also abolish them completely.
The second one is the extension and revision of the scope of application.
The range of products covered by the agreement has been extended.
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Agreement on the Environment
Switzerland has joined the European Environmental Agency (EEA), which is
responsible for gathering and analysing data on the state of the environment
in European countries and for ensuring that this data is comparable. EEA
membership means that Switzerland will actively participate in organising
projects and research at a European level, gain full access to the EEA’s
pan-European comparable environmental data and will be able to submit
comparable Swiss data as a basis for an effective environmental policy.
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Agreement on Statistics
This bilateral agreement on cooperation in the area of statistics regulates
the progressive harmonisation of statistical data collection between
Switzerland and the EU. Comparability of Swiss and European data in such
important areas as trade relations, the employment market, social security,
transport and the environment is thus guaranteed in the medium term.
Switzerland also gains prominence in Europe, in so far as greater quantities
of Swiss data are published in statistics compiled by Eurostat, the
Statistical Office of the European Union.
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Agreement on Media
The EU has set up a group of programmes called MEDIA, which seeks to
strengthen the competitiveness of the European film industry. The agreement
grants full participation in the EU programmes – MEDIA Plus (promoting the
creation and distribution of Community audio-visual works) and MEDIA
Training programmes (training programmes for professionals in the EU
audio-visual programme industry).
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Agreement on Pensions
The EU institutions tax the pensions of their retired officials at source.
The pensions of retired EU officials living in Switzerland are also subject
to taxation in Switzerland. To avoid this double taxation, Switzerland
agreed to grant an income tax exemption for the pensions of retired EU
officials living in Switzerland.
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Declaration of intent on Education, Occupational Training, Youth
The EU has established several programmes in the areas of education,
vocational training and youth. They seek to promote the provision and
quality of education and the cross-border mobility of pupils, trainees,
students and teachers. Within the framework of the bilateral negotiations
II, Switzerland and the EU have made a declaration of intent on the form of
intensified cooperation in these programmes.
The ratification procedure for the Bilateral Agreements II is proceeding
according to Swiss constitutional law. The Federal Council submitted the
agreements to Parliament for approval on October 1, 2004, and they were approved
by the Parliament on December 17, 2004. Except for the Agreement on Processed
Agricultural Products, which was not subject to a referendum (and provisionally
entered into force on February 2, 2005), the Bilateral Agreements II are subject
to an optional referendum designated to be held between December 21, 2004 to
March 31, 2005.
On a global level, the Bilateral Agreements II are balanced and satisfy key
interests of both parties, showing that the bilateral path is feasible for the
time being. However, the future of the relationship between Switzerland and the
EU will be a subject of continuing political debate.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will the Schengen Agreement bring
about a security deficit because of the abolition of border controls within
the Schengen area? No. The Schengen States have adopted a number of
compensatory measures that will enhance their cooperation and ensure that
there is no security deficit. These measures are as folllows:
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reinforcing the controls at the
external frontiers;
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improving and simplifying
cross-border cooperation at the police and judicial levels;
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applying a common visa policy for
short stays; and
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providing rules to combat the illegal
use of small arms.
What will happen if Switzerland refuses to extend the Agreement on the
Free Movement of Persons to the ten new EU Member States? In case the
Swiss people vote against extending the Agreement on the Freedom of Movement
of Persons to the ten new EU Member States, this would result in an unequal
treatment of EU citizens by Switzerland: While the citizens of the 15 “old”
EU States would benefit from the freedom of movement, those in the new EU
Member States would be deprived of it. It has to be assumed that the EU
would not accept such an unequal treatment of EU citizens. The EU could
renounce the Agreement on the Freedom of Movement of Persons concluded with
Switzerland, which would also invalidate the six other agreements of the
bilaterals I (the agreements on technical barriers to trade, on public
procurement, on overland transport, on civil aviation, on agricultural
produce and on research) because these agreements are legally linked (guillotine
clause). Such a scenario would have important political and economical
consequences: Switzerland would (in principle) lose the economic advantages
and the positive impact it derives from the agreements. It would not be able
to take full advantage of the opening up of the new markets in Eastern
Europe. From a political point of view, the relations with the EU would be
severely affected and the credibility of Switzerland as a partner would be
weakened.
When does Switzerland intend to join the EU? EU membership
remains a long-term goal for Switzerland. For the time being, it is
premature to consider initiating membership negotiations. However, in
preparation of the future debate, the Swiss Government will submit a report
in 2007 on the concrete consequences for the Swiss State, its federal system,
the direct democracy, its tradition of neutrality and its foreign policy.
The Swiss people will then be fully informed to be able to decide in due
time. But at present, Switzerland intends to pursue its bilateral approach.
What is the bilateral approach? In terms of European policy,
Switzerland has adopted a “bilateral approach”. This means that Switzerland
defends its national interests through bilateral negotiations with the EU
and the conclusion of specific agreements in certain sectors. A package of
such agreements, for instance on the free movement of persons and on the
co-operation in the field of scientific research, has entered into force in
June 2002. Another set of bilateral agreements has been concluded last year.
The European Union is Switzerland’s principal partner, in political,
cultural and in economic terms.
April 2006
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