Switzerland conjures up a fair swag of clichés: irresistible chocolates, kitsch clocks, yodelling Heidis, humourless bankers, international bureaucracies and an orderly, anally-retentive and rather bland national persona. But Harry Lime was wrong on more than one account when, in The Third Man, he said 500 years of Swiss democracy and peace had produced nothing more than the cuckoo clock. For a start, the Germans invented this monstrous timepiece; secondly, the Swiss, who are a brainy lot, have won more Nobel Prizes and registered more patents per capita than any other nation on earth. Muesli, DDT and life insurance may not be the stuff of legend, but where would the rest of us swashbucklers be without a bit of Swiss nous behind us?
Switzerland may be neutral but it is certainly not flavourless. The fusion of German, French and Italian ingredients has formed a robust national culture, and the country's Alpine landscapes have enough zing to reinvigorate the most jaded traveller. Goethe summed up Switzerland succinctly as a combination of 'the colossal and the well-ordered'. The untamed majesty of the Alps and the tidy, just-so precision of Swiss towns prevent Switzerland from ever being as one-dimensional as some pundits like to try and make it.
Full name : Swiss Confederation
Capital : Bern (pop 130,000)
Area : 41,295 sq km (16,105 sq mi)
Population : 7.4 million
People : 74% German, 20% French, 4% Italian & 1% Romansch
Language : German, French, Italian & Romansch
Religion : 49% Roman Catholic & 48% Protestant
Government : Federal republic, parliementary system
President : Micheline Calmy-Rey
GDP : US$240 billion
GDP per head : US$32,200
Growth rate : 1.9%
Inflation rate : 0.8%
Major industries : Banking, insurance, pharmaceuticals, chemicals & precision instruments, tourism
Trading partners : EU (esp. Germany, France, Italy, UK), US, Japan
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