The
State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) revealed on Thursday that
Switzerland's gross domestic product (GDP) rose 1.8 percent q-o-q in the second
quarter of 2021, after a revised 0.4 percent q-o-q contraction in the previous
quarter (originally a 0.5 percent q-o-q decrease).
Economists
had forecast the Swiss economy would expand by 2.0 percent q-o-q.
According
to the report, value-added grew markedly in the service sector as a result of eased
coronavirus restrictions. Accommodation and food services surged 48.9 percent
q-o-q, recovering after setbacks in the winter quarters. Arts, entertainment
and recreation also registered strong growth – by 52.9 percent q-o-q - thanks
to less restrictive measures. In addition, trade increased 4.8 percent q-o-q as
brick-and-mortar businesses reopened. Meanwhile, the industry’s growth decelerates,
normalizing after the strong rebound in the previous quarters.
With
the easing of COVID measures, private consumption recovered strongly, recording
a 4.1 percent q-o-q rise. Expansion in government consumption accelerated to 5.5
percent q-o-q due to extraordinary expenditure to cope with the pandemic. Investment
in equipment jumped 1.6 percent q-o-q, while construction investment edged up 0.1
percent q-o-q. Overall, domestic demand rose strongly, which was accompanied by
a slight increase in imports (+0.5 percent q-o-q).
In
y-o-y terms, Swiss GDP grew 7.7 percent in the second quarter, following a
revised 0.7 percent decline in the first quarter (originally a drop of 0.5
percent). This represented the strongest growth on record but was below economists’
forecasts for a 9.0 percent advance.