Analysis — Zug Economy
Economic analysis and editorial on Canton Zug — tax policy shifts, competitiveness dynamics, OECD reform, and the forces shaping Zug's economic future.
Original analysis and editorial on the forces shaping Canton Zug’s economic trajectory. This section goes beyond data presentation to examine the structural drivers and policy decisions that make Zug what it is — and the pressures, from OECD tax reform to EU bilateral negotiations, that may reshape it.
Analysis on this Site represents the editorial judgement of the author at the time of writing and is clearly distinguished from factual reporting. It is not tax, legal, or investment advice.
Canton Zug Economic Outlook 2026: Growth, Sectors and the Tax Question
Zug in 2026: Still the Gold Standard
Canton Zug enters 2026 in a position that would be the envy of virtually any jurisdiction on earth. Its GDP per capita …
Zug Beyond Crypto: The Canton's Broader Economic Base
The Narrative Problem
Canton Zug suffers from a narrative problem that its economic development authorities would dearly like to solve. In the global business …
Zug's Tax Competitiveness After OECD Pillar Two: What Changes, What Doesn't
A Structural Shift, Not a Death Blow
When the OECD’s Inclusive Framework agreed the Pillar Two framework in October 2021, the reaction in some Swiss …
Zug's Digital Economy: From Crypto Valley to AI Hub — The Next Phase of Switzerland's Technology Canton
Crypto Valley built Zug's identity as a technology jurisdiction. Artificial intelligence is building its next chapter. The same factors that made Zug the world's leading blockchain hub — regulatory pragmatism, institutional quality, tax efficiency, and FINMA's principle-based oversight — are attracting AI companies, data infrastructure, and digital governance frameworks to Switzerland. The transition from crypto-first to broadly digital is underway.
OECD Pillar Two and Zug: How the Global Minimum Tax Affects Crypto Valley
When the OECD announced agreement on a global minimum corporate tax of 15% for large multinationals, it was widely interpreted as a direct challenge to low-tax …