Zurich's dining scene thrives as tourism rebounds 18% year-over-year. Discover which restaurants and cafés are expanding and why summer is peak season for Zurich dining.
As geopolitical friction reshapes global supply chains, local consumers face rising prices on everything from electronics to food—here's what you need to know.
As capital flows into the city's food and beverage scene accelerate, business leaders decode the economic signals reshaping dining and lodging across Switzerland's financial hub.
Record visitor numbers are forcing employers across the city's hotels, restaurants and attractions to compete fiercely for workers, transforming wage expectations and skill demands.
Economic indicators reveal how capital reallocation and sector-specific headwinds are reshaping employment prospects across Switzerland's financial heartland.
As Western companies pivot away from traditional Asian suppliers, Zurich's logistics and trading firms are positioning themselves at the centre of a continental shift—and some have already locked in lucrative contracts.
As vacancy rates climb and landlords struggle with oversupply, the city's once-resilient commercial property sector confronts its toughest year in a decade.
Mounting geopolitical tensions and currency volatility are forcing local firms to recalibrate their international strategies and pass rising costs onto consumers.
Rising instability in Iran, Pakistan, and Venezuela is forcing local employers to recalibrate hiring strategies, even as Swiss economic fundamentals remain solid.
A former restaurateur's innovative approach to quality, affordability and sustainability is drawing crowds to Wiedikon and proving there's still room for disruption in Switzerland's competitive hospitality sector.
As housing and everyday expenses climb to record levels, the city's reputation as a premium destination for top investment professionals is facing its sternest test in years.
As visitor numbers surge, hospitality and service sectors are offering competitive wages that are luring workers away from traditional finance roles, forcing employers across the city to rethink recruitment.
As visitor numbers surge past pre-pandemic levels, everyday residents are discovering how the tourism economy reshapes everything from rental prices to café culture.
As tech hubs expand across the city's periphery, traditional employment patterns are fracturing—and local workers face both unprecedented opportunity and fierce global competition.
As foreign investment flows shift and talent migration patterns change, Zurich's employers are learning to interpret the hidden language of economic indicators.