Federal Administration admin.ch
Federal Department of Foreign Affairs
Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation SDC
SDC – on location worldwide

Visit Swiss Cooperation Office websites.

Switzerland
Switzerland 
Search:
Switzerland’s contribution to EU enlargement
Annual Conference on Swiss Cooperation with Central and Eastern Europe – 19 November 2010, Aarau
The SDC and the SECO review progress made so far. Representatives of the governments and administrations from the new EU member states will provide first-hand information about the activities taking place as part of the enlargement contribution.

Swiss enlargement contribution

New EU member countries

Swiss Enlargement Contribution website: www.contribution-enlargement.admin.ch

For more than a decade, i.e., from 1990 on, Switzerland has been actively supporting the process of political and economic transition in Central and Eastern Europe. With the accession of the ten new member countries from Central and Eastern Europe that joined the European Union on 1 May 2004 and 1 January 2007, respectively, as part of EU expansion eastwards, the transition process successfully came to an end. Meanwhile, both Malta and Cyprus also joined the EU on 1 May 2004. For Switzerland, this EU enlargement holds forth the promise of more security and stability in its neighbouring countries, while providing access to one of the world’s fastest-growing economic areas.

This expansion has, however, aggravated the imbalance between rich and poor in the European Union. The per capita income in the New Member States remains well below the EU per capita average before enlargement. In addition, the regional disparities within the individual EU Member States have also become more intense.

The Swiss Enlargement contribution to the New EU-Member States 

Through its Cohesion and Regional Development Funds, the EU is striving to reduce these imbalances, and Switzerland is contributing to efforts to narrow this gap with its own programme. The necessary framework credit, based on the Federal Law on Cooperation with the Countries of Eastern Europe adopted by the Swiss electorate in November 2006, was approved by Parliament in June 2007. Further information about programme implementation can be found under www.contribution-enlargement.admin.ch.
In each of the countries, a National Coordination Unit has been created to receive project proposals.

Percentage allocation of resources

Country in millions of CHF Country in millions of CHF

Poland

489.020

Latvia

59.880

Hungary

130.738

Estonia

39.920

Czech Rep.

109.780

Slovenia

21.956

Lithuania

70.858

Cyprus

5.988

Slovakia

66.866

Malta

2.994

Romania*

181.000

Bulgaria*

76.000

*Swiss support for Romania and Bulgaria is provided by means of a separate framework credit that was approved by the Swiss parliament on 7 December 2009.

Areas of activity

Switzerland’s programme has a clear thematic and geographic focus and supplements the EU’s support programmes. The SDC and SECO share responsibility for enlargement-contribution implementation. Swiss projects provide support in the following thematic priority areas:

Programme implementation: The partner countries are responsible for choosing the projects, while the final decisions on funding are made by Switzerland. A National Coordination Unit has been set up in every country to receive project applications. In Romania and Bulgaria, modified implementation procedures are applicable for the individual thematic areas.

Further information on the Swiss Enlargement Contribution can be found at:
www.erweiterungsbeitrag.admin.ch


Background information about the 12 new member countries

Despite strong economic growth in the new member countries (twice as high as in the EU-10), they still lag far behind the rest of the EU and account for 60% of the less economically and socially developed EU regions. For instance, tail-ender Latvia reaches just 41% of the average EU per capita income, compared with Luxembourg’s 215%. Employment figures reveal a further imbalance: in the new member countries, unemployment is on average 60% higher than in the EU-15, and the number of long-term unemployed is twice as high. In the new member countries, employment is 14% lower than in the old member countries, and there are also major differences in social development. Life expectancy for men in the new member countries is 69, eight years less than in the EU-15, and investment in education and health services is much lower.

Unequal internal development is another characteristic of the new member countries: the divide between rural and urban areas, especially regions near the capitals, has widened since the political system changed.

Facts and figures
Population (in millions)
Territory (km2)
GDP/per capita in PPS (2006) *
Growth GDP/per capita (%) (2006)
Employment growth % (m/f) 2006
Unemployment rate % (m/f) 2006
Life expectancy in years (m/f) 2005
Estonia Lithuania Latvia Czech Rep. Poland Slovakia Hungary Slovenia Cyprus Malta
1.34 3.4 2.29 10.25 38.12 5.38 10.06 2 0.776 0.405
45'227 65'300 64'589 78'866 311'889 49'035 93'030 20'273 9'215 316
63.9 55.0 53.2 75.6 50.4 59.7 62.2 82.6 88.8 72.9
11.63 7.41 12.5 5.66 7.14 9.76 3.85 4.39 1.52 2.27
6.5/4.3 0.7/2.8 4.2/5.5 1.7/1.6 3.4/3.2 3.2/1.2 0.9/0.4 1.5/0.8 0.5/3.1 0.0/2.8
6.2/5.6 5.8/5.4 7.4/6.2 5.8/8.8 13.0/14.9 12.3/14.7 7.2/7.8 4.9/7.2 4.0/5.4 6.5
67.3/78.1 65.3/77.3 65.3/76.5 72.9/79.2 70.7/79.3 70.1/78.0 68.6/77.1 73.9/80.8 76.8/81.0 77.2/81.3


Source: Eurostat, EIU country profiles 2007

* PPS = Purchasing Power Standard. The volume index of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in per capita PPS is expressed in terms of the average of the 25 EU countries (excluding Bulgaria and Romania) which is taken as 100%.

Additional Information and Documents

Here, you will find more publications, links, documents and articles about Swiss development cooperation and humanitarian aid in this region.