As a Swiss I have to take exception to being thrown into the same cathegory as Austria (or Germany for that matter).
No, but seriously:
While geogrphicly Austria is pretty similar, demographicly it's not. Demogrphicly Switzerland is somewhere between Germany and Monaco. There are incredibly many super-rich people in Switzerland, mainly industrialists and brokers but also sports, music and movie stars. That's because Switzerland is a tax-paradise with a tax law, called "Pauschalbesteuerung" meaning you pay a fixed figure independent of your income and wealth (btw. this option is only available for foreigners, so Switzerland ensures it won't lose it's own taxpayers, only the germans, french, americans and all the others).
Short: There are more super-rich people in Switzerland (relatively, as % of population) than there are in Germany or Austria and that's actually visible on the streets of cities like Lausanne or Zug.
I've seen entire convoys of cars in the 6 and 7 figure price range driving through Lausanne.
In my opinion Switzerland belongs into a special "tax-paradise region" or maybe should get its own region (since it doesn't really fit in with Monaco either) or demographical and geographical regions should be handled separately (this is actually no real difference to making own regions for such countries).