The Swiss city of Geneva is to introduce a minimum wage of 23 Swiss francs ($25) an hour, equal to roughly 3,772 Swiss francs ($4,100) a month for a 41-hour working week.
Nearly two-thirds of the canton, or state, of Geneva on Sunday voted in favor of introducing the minimum wage, which is reported to be the highest in the world.
It is set to be implemented later this month, according to the Groupement transfrontalier européen website, an organization representing cross-border workers in France and Switzerland.
The measure had actually been rejected by voters twice in 2011 and 2014.
However, the coronavirus pandemic has further highlighted Geneva’s poverty problem, with reports of thousands queuing for food.
Geneva is known as one of the most expensive cities in the world and ranked ninth on HR consulting firm Mercer’s 2020 global cost of living survey.
Michel Charrat, the president of the Groupement transfrontalier européen, told the Guardian that the vote to pass the measure represented a “mark of solidarity” with Geneva’s poorer citizens.
“Covid has shown that a certain section of the Swiss population cannot live in Geneva,” he said.
Geneva’s new minimum wage is more than triple that in the U.S., at $7.25 per hour and more than double the U.K.’s highest basic hourly rate of £8.72 ($11.20).