President Trump's tariffs have caused shock worldwide, with governments scrambling to find a deal to placate him. Some have managed: the UK got in first, with a sweet deal of just 10%, the European Union crept in behind with 15%.
Still more than they were paying before Mr Trump's "liberation day", but less than they had feared.
Spare a thought then for Switzerland, which has been hit with punitive tariffs of 39%, and has so far been unable to persuade the US president to relent. Switzerland is not in the EU, so it can't benefit from the deal struck by Brussels.
But Switzerland is regularly ranked as the world's most competitive and innovative economy. It is also one of the biggest investors in the US, creating, Swiss business leaders say, 400,000 jobs. That's why they find the US strategy not only outrageous, but inexplicable.
"Thirty nine percent tariffs: I was just shocked," says Jan Atteslander, director of international relations for the Swiss business federation Economiesuisse.
"This is unjustified, you can't explain why they are so high."



