Switzerland: The land that inflation left behind

* Swiss inflation, at 2.2%, is fraction of rates peers face

* Some prices, such as for healthcare, are falling

* Politicians have legislated to tackle high prices

* Swiss energy mix, wage restraint, strong franc also help

By Paul Carrel

BERN, March 11 (Reuters) - While the rest of Europe grapples with surging prices, in Switzerland inflation is so tame that some key costs are actually falling.

The price of healthcare - a big chunk of Swiss household budgets - dropped by 0.5% on the year in February, when overall inflation hit 2.2%. That was the highest inflation rate since 2008, but still only a fraction of the levels other industrialised countries face.

A combination of factors lies behind Switzerland's modest price pressures: consumers demanding better deals, an energy mix that leaves the country less exposed than others to soaring oil and gas costs, wage restraint, and some protection against import price inflation from the strong franc.

Certainly, part of the reason for low Swiss inflation is because the cost of living here is already so high.

"One of the aspects of Switzerland is that we tend to have high prices in practically everything when you compare it with our neighbours in Europe," said Nannette Hechler-Fayd'herbe, global head of economics & research at Credit Suisse.

Savvy Swiss consumers have found some workarounds.

An hour's drive from Zurich, just across the border into Germany, a cottage industry of 'delivery address' firms has sprung up, charging Swiss customers a small fee to hold goods they order at bargain German prices and later collect.

"People come here because they can buy at favourable prices," said entrepreneur Mandy Klein, a German who started her delivery address business from home in 2009 and now runs two depots in the picturesque lakeside German border town of Constance.

The brisk delivery trade in Constance shows Swiss households' drive to reduce their living costs wherever possible. Even so, Eurostat figures show https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Comparative_price_levels_of_consumer_goods_and_services the price level for household consumption expenditure was still 60% higher in Switzerland in 2020 than the euro area average.

The upshot is that consumer groups, fed up of Switzerland being a "high-price island", have lobbied for political action which resulted in two legislative changes from the beginning of this year to give households a better deal.

The first toughened up Switzerland's cartel law to impede businesses from marking up their prices for the Swiss market.