Are the lean years coming now?
In total, Perich took part in some 550 Executive Board meetings and worked with fully 18 Executive Board members (including six Presidents). What he appreciated about his work with the Executive Board was how the members discussed controversial dossiers with dignity and respect and with a focus on facts: “We weren’t there primarily to represent our departmental interests, but instead we always had the good of the organisation as a whole in mind.”
Handing over ETH’s finance department to his successor Stefan Spiegel (see ETH News, 10 March 2023), Perich leaves behind a financially solid ETH. But how does he assess the prospects for the future? Since the Swiss Confederation has already announced cost-cutting measures that will also affect education, research and innovation, will ETH soon have to tighten its belt? Public finance is always subject to economic and structural cycles, Perich says. When he first came to ETH in 2003, it was also a period of increased pressure to save money.
However, he points out that the stable growth prospects, which everyone had grown accustomed to, have been clouded since 2020 by the coronavirus crisis, the war in Ukraine, supply bottlenecks, rapidly rising inflation rates and rising prices for energy and raw materials. “It’s going to take some time for the situation to ease up. Against this backdrop, everyone at ETH will have to economise in the near future. Nevertheless, I’m convinced that ETH will emerge stronger from this.”
And finally: Perich’s mandates also included catering, academic sports (ASVZ) and the ETH store, which he “especially enjoyed” – that’s why his colleagues surprised him with a special pink ETH jumper as a parting gift.