Next week, Swiss voters are going to head to the ballot box to decide whether to cap the Swiss population at 10 million by 2050. Supporters of immigration caps can often be presented as Far Right, fearful, and parochial. I have felt this way in a U.S. context. But then I have to remind myself that the U.S. and Switzerland have two different contexts. Switzerland does not even have the integration issues that many of its European neighbors have. This is in part that Switzerland is able to integrate its immigrants better because they mainly come from countries like France, Italy, and Germany. Although the primer on the initiative lists Islamic culture as a reason, the main reasons for the Swiss ballot is a combination of housing and infrastructure strain.
In 2014, I expressed concerns about a similar Swiss referendum for a quota on immigration. Switzerland's immigration quota was a self-defeating policy because immigration is driven by labor demand and it is empirically shown to strengthen employment and economic performance. Less immigration means less economic output and less revenue.
But I keep coming back to the housing component. In the United States, J.D. Vance wrongfully blamed housing affordability on immigrants. In the U.S. case, it is true that immigrants consume housing, but they also disproportionately build housing, so much so that stifling off the construction labor with strict immigration policy makes matters worse. I cannot help but think that something similar is going on here. It seems like Switzerland is trying to solve a housing problem with immigration policy.
On the one hand, Zurich has made strides by boosting housing supply by 9 percent with upzoning. On the other hand, only land inside designated "building zones' can be developed, and done so over a 15-year demand rule (Swiss Spatial Planning Act [RPG], Article 15). The RPG also has agricultural zoning laws that further limit sprawl (Art. 16) to construct more housing. On top of that, each canton has their own zoning regulations and permitting rules that get in the way of housing construction.
The Swiss case against immigration is not reactionary restrictionism. Switzerland faces housing and infrastructure strains. At the same time, Swiss housing scarcity is not occurring in a vacuum. The land use restrictions, zoning regulations, and permitting laws fundamentally limit Switzerland's housing supply. If this referendum passes, Switzerland will be treating a housing supply problem as a population problem, and will be doing so to its own detriment.

