PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Belgium
Geography
Area: 32,547 square kilometers (12,566 sq. mi.),
about the size of Maryland.
Cities: Capital--Brussels (pop. 992,041).
Other cities--Antwerp (452,474); Ghent
(228,016); Charleroi (200,460); Liège (184,303);
Bruges (116,811); and Namur (105,705).
People
Population (2004): 10,396,421; urban--69%.
Annual population growth rate: 0.4%.
Density: 861 per sq. mi. Linguistic regions--(Dutch-speaking)
Flanders 58%; (French-speaking) Wallonia 31.7%;
(legally bilingual) Brussels Capital Region
9.6%; German-speaking 0.7%.
Religions: Predominantly Roman Catholic, with
Protestant, Jewish, Muslim, Anglican, Greek and
Russian Orthodox, as well as secularism,
"recognized" religions receiving government
subsidies.
Languages: Dutch, French, German.
Education: Literacy--98%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy under a
constitutional monarch.
Independence: 1830.
Constitution: 1994 (revised).
Branches: Executive--King (head of
state), Prime Minister (head of government),
Cabinet. Legislative--bicameral
parliament (Senate and House of
Representatives). Flemish Parliament and
government for regional and community affairs;
Walloon Regional Parliament and government for
Walloon regional affairs; Francophone Community
Parliament and government for Francophone
community affairs; Brussels Regional Parliament
and government for Brussels regional affairs;
and German-language Community Parliament and
government for community affairs.
Major political parties: Christian Democratic,
Liberal, Socialist, Green, Vlaams Belang.
Suffrage: Over 18, compulsory.
Political subdivisions: Ten provinces, three
regions, three communities, 589 municipalities.
Economy
GDP (PPP) (2005 est.): $373.4 billion.
Annual real growth rate (2005): 1.3%.
Per capita income (PPP) (2005): $35,749.
Natural resources: Coal.
Agriculture: (1.4% of GDP) Products--livestock,
including dairy cattle, grain, sugarbeets,
nursery products, flax, tobacco, potatoes, and
other fruits and vegetables.
Industry: (24% of GDP) Types--machinery,
iron, coal, textiles, chemicals, glass,
pharmaceuticals, manufactured goods.
Trade: Exports--$244.4 billion (2004
est.): Iron and steel, coal, transportation
equipment, tractors, diamonds, petroleum
products. Imports--$208.8 billion (2005
est.): Fuels, chemical products, grains,
foodstuffs. Trading partners--EU 74%;
United States 6%.
GEOGRAPHY AND PEOPLE
Belgium is located in Western Europe, bordered
by the Netherlands, Germany, Luxembourg, France,
and the North Sea. Although generally flat, the
terrain becomes increasingly hilly and forested
in the southeast (Ardennes) region. Climate is
cool, temperate, and rainy; summer temperatures
average 77°F, winters average 45°F. Annual
extremes (rarely attained) are 10°F and 100°F.
Geographically and culturally, Belgium is at
a crossroads of Europe, and during the past
2,000 years has witnessed a constant ebb and
flow of different races and cultures.
Consequently, Belgium is one of Europe's true
melting pots with Celtic, Roman, Germanic,
French, Dutch, Spanish, and Austrian cultures
having made an imprint.
Belgium is divided ethnically into the
Dutch-speaking Flemings and French-speaking
Walloons, the 70,000 residents of the eastern
German cantons, and the bilingual capital of
Brussels. The population density is the second
highest in Europe, after the Netherlands.
HISTORY
Belgium derives its name from the Belgae, a
Celtic tribe. The Belgae were forced to yield to
Roman legions during the first century B.C. For
some 300 years thereafter, what is now Belgium
flourished as a province of Rome. But Rome's
power gradually lessened. In about A.D. 300,
Attila the Hun invaded what is now Germany and
pushed Germanic tribes into northern Belgium.
About 100 years later, the Germanic tribe of the
Franks invaded and took possession of Belgium.
The northern part of present-day Belgium became
an overwhelmingly Germanized and
Germanic-Frankish-speaking area, whereas in the
southern part people continued to be Roman and
spoke derivatives of Latin. After coming under
the rule of the Dukes of Burgundy and, through
marriage, passing into the possession of the
Hapsburgs, Belgium was occupied by the Spanish
(1519-1713) and the Austrians (1713-1794).
Under these various rulers, and especially
during the 500 years from the 12th to the 17th
century, the great cities of Ghent, Bruges,
Brussels, and Antwerp took turns at being major
European centers for commerce, industry
(especially textiles), and art. Flemish
painting--from Van Eyck and Breugel to Rubens
and Van Dyck--became the most prized in Europe.
Flemish tapestries hung on castle walls
throughout Europe.
Following the French Revolution, Belgium was
invaded and annexed by Napoleonic France in
1795. Following the defeat of Napoleon's army at
the Battle of Waterloo, fought just a few miles
south of Brussels, Belgium was separated from
France and made part of the Netherlands by the
Congress of Vienna in 1815.
In 1830, Belgium won its independence from
the Dutch as a result of an uprising of the
Belgian people. A constitutional monarchy was
established in 1831, with a monarch invited in
from the House of Saxe-Coburg Gotha in Germany.
Belgium was invaded by Germany in 1914 and
again in 1940. Those invasions, plus
disillusionment over postwar Soviet behavior,
made Belgium one of the foremost advocates of
collective security within the framework of
European integration and the Atlantic
partnership.
Since 1944, when British, Canadian, and
American armies liberated Belgium, the country
has lived in security and at a level of
increased well-being.
Language, economic, and political differences
between Dutch-speaking Flanders and Francophone
Wallonia have led to increased divisions in
Belgian society. The Industrial Revolution of
the late 18th and the 19th century accentuated
the linguistic North-South division. Francophone
Wallonia became an early industrial boom area,
affluent and politically dominant.
Dutch-speaking Flanders remained agricultural
and was economically and politically
outdistanced by Brussels and Wallonia. The last
50 years have marked the rapid economic
development of Flanders, resulting in a
corresponding shift of political and economic
power to the Flemish, who now constitute an
absolute majority (58%) of the population.
Demonstrations in the early 1960s led to the
establishment of a formal linguistic border in
1962, and elaborate rules made to protect
minorities in linguistically mixed border areas.
In 1970, Flemish and Francophone cultural
councils were established with authority in
matters of language and culture for the
two-language groups. Each of the three economic
regions--Flanders, Wallonia, and Brussels--was
granted a significant measure of political
autonomy.
Since 1984, the German language community of
Belgium (in the eastern part of Liège Province)
has had its own legislative assembly and
executive, which have authority in cultural,
language, and subsequently educational affairs.
In 1988-89, the Constitution was again
amended to give additional responsibilities to
the regions and communities. The most sweeping
change was the devolution of educational
responsibilities to the community level. As a
result, the regions and communities were
provided additional revenue, and Brussels was
given its own legislative assembly and
executive.
Another important constitutional reform
occurred in the summer of 1993, changing Belgium
from a unitary to a federal state. It also
reformed the bicameral parliamentary system and
provided for the direct election of the members
of community and regional legislative councils.
The bilingual Brabant province, which contained
the Brussels region, was split into separate
Flemish and Walloon Brabant provinces. The
revised Constitution came into force in 1994.
A parliamentary democracy, Belgium has been
governed by successive coalitions of two or more
political parties. The centrist Christian
Democratic Party often provided the Prime
Minister. The June 13, 1999 general election saw
a significant drop in overall Christian
Democratic support. Driven in part by resentment
over a mishandled dioxin food-contamination
crisis just before the June 1999 election,
Belgian voters rejected Jean Luc Dehaene's
longstanding coalition government of Christian
Democrats and Socialists and voted into power a
coalition led by Flemish Liberal Leader Guy
Verhofstadt. The first Verhofstadt government
(1999-2003) was a six-party coalition between
the Flemish and Francophone Liberals,
Socialists, and Greens. It was the first
Liberal-led coalition in generations and the
first six-party coalition in 20 years. It also
was the first time the Greens had participated
in Belgium's federal government. In the most
recent general election in May 2003, the Greens
suffered significant loses, while the Socialists
posted strong gains and the Liberals also had
modest growth in electoral support. Liberal
Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt reconstituted the
coalition as a four-party government in July
2003, with only the Liberals and Socialists in
power.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
National Government
Belgium is a hereditary constitutional monarchy.
The current monarch is King Albert II, who took
the oath of office on August 9, 1993.
As titular head of state, the King plays a
largely ceremonial and symbolic role in the
nation. His primary political function is to
designate a political leader to attempt to form
a new cabinet following either an election, the
resignation of a government, or a parliamentary
vote of no confidence. The King is seen as
playing a symbolic unifying role, representing a
common national Belgian identity.
The Belgian Parliament consists of a Senate
and a House of Representatives. The House of
Representatives has 150 directly elected
members. The Senate has 71 elected members. The
executive branch of the government consists of
ministers and secretaries of state (junior
ministers) drawn from the political parties that
form the government coalition. The number of
ministers is limited to 15, and they have no
seat in Parliament. The Council of Ministers is
chaired by the Prime Minister and consists of
the ministerial heads of the executive
departments.
The allocation of powers between the
Parliament and the Council of Ministers is
somewhat similar to the United States--the
Parliament enacts legislation and appropriates
funds--but the Belgian Parliament does not have
the same degree of independent power that the
U.S. Congress has. Members of political parties
represented in the government are expected to
support all bills presented by the Cabinet. The
House of Representatives is the "political" body
that votes on motions of confidence and budgets.
The Senate deals with long-term issues and votes
on an equal footing with the Chamber on a
limited range of matters, including
constitutional reform bills and international
treaties.
The largest parties in the current Chamber
are the Flemish Liberal Party (VLD), 25 seats;
the Francophone Socialists (PS), 25 seats, the
Francophone Liberals (MR), 25 seats; the Flemish
Socialists and Spirit alliance (SP.A/Spirit), 23
seats, the Flemish Christian Democratic party
(CD&V), 21 seats; the right-wing Vlaams Belang
party (VB), 18 seats; and the Francophone
Christian Democrats (CDH) 7 seats. The
Francophone Greens (ECOLO), have 4 seats, while
the New Flemish Alliance (NV.A) and Francophone
Front National each have 1 seat. The Flemish
Greens (AGALEV -- now Groen!) did not win any
Chamber seats in the 2003 election, but have one
"co-opted" Senator (see below) as a result of an
agreement with the Flemish Socialist Party.
The Prime Minister and his ministers
administer the government and the various public
services. Ministers must defend their policies
and performance in person before the House.
The Council of Ministers
At the federal level, executive power is wielded
by the Council of Ministers. The Prime Minister
chairs the Council. Each minister heads a
governmental department. No single party or
party "family" across linguistic lines holds an
absolute majority of seats in Parliament.
Consequently, the Council of Ministers reflects
the weight of political parties that constitute
the governing coalition for the House, currently
the four-party Liberal-Socialist coalition.
Principal Government Officials
Prime Minister--Guy Verhofstadt
Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Justice--Laurette
Onkelinx
Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of
Finance--Didier Reynders
Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Budget and
Public Enterprise--Freya van den Bossche
Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of
Interior--Patrick Dewael
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Karel De Gucht
Minister of Defense--Andre Flahaut
Minister for the Economy, Energy, Foreign Trade,
and Science Policy--Marc Verwilghen
Ambassador to the United States--Frans van
Daele
Ambassador to the United Nations--Johan Verbeke
The Belgian
embassy is located at 3330 Garfield Street
NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-333-6900; fax
202-333-3079).
The Electoral System
The number of seats in the House of
Representatives is constitutionally set at 150,
elected from 11 electoral districts. Each
district is given a number of seats proportional
to its total population (not number of eligible
voters) ranging from 4 for the Luxembourg
district to 24 for Antwerp. The districts are
divided along linguistic lines: 5 Flemish, 5
Walloon, and the bilingual district of Brussels.
The Senate consists of 71 seats. For
electoral purposes, Senators are divided into
three categories: 40 directly elected; 21
elected by the community parliaments; and 10
"co-opted" Senators. For the election of the 25
Flemish and 15 francophone directly elected
Senators, the country is divided into three
electoral districts--Flanders, Wallonia, and the
Brussels Capital Region. Of the 21 Senators
representing the communities, 10 are elected by
the Flemish Parliament, 10 by the French
Community Parliament, and 1 by the
German-language Parliament.
The remaining category, the 10 "co-opted"
senators, are elected by the first two groups of
senators. The princes and princesses of the
royal line are also members of the
Senate--currently Prince Phillippe, Prince
Laurent, and Princess Astrid.
In Belgium, there are no "national" parties
operating on both sides of the linguistic
border. Consequently, elections are a contest
among Flemish parties in Dutch-speaking Flanders
and Francophone parties in Wallonia. Only in
officially bilingual Brussels can voters choose
from either Flemish or Francophone parties.
Several months before an election, the parties
form a list of candidates for each district.
Parties are allowed to place as many candidates
on their "list" as there are seats available.
The formation of the list is an internal process
that varies with each party. The number of seats
each party receives and where on a list a
candidate is placed, or how many individual
votes a candidate receives, determines whether a
candidate is elected. Since no single party
holds an absolute majority in Parliament, after
each election the strongest party or "party
family" will create a coalition with other
parties to form the government. Voting is
compulsory in Belgium; more than 90% of eligible
voters participate.
Belgium has 25 seats in the European
Parliament.
Belgium’s Linguistic Divide
In August 1980, the Belgian Parliament passed a
devolution bill and amended the Constitution,
establishing "Community autonomy." As a result,
in Flanders, the Flemish Parliament and
government are competent for both regional and
community affairs; in Wallonia, the Francophone
Community Parliament and government are
competent for community affairs, while the
Walloon Regional Parliament and government are
responsible for regional affairs. Subsequent
constitutional reform established a community
Parliament and government governments for the
German-speaking cantons in 1983, and a regional
Parliament and government for the Brussels
Capital Region in 1989.
The regional and community governments have
jurisdiction over transportation, public works,
water policy, cultural matters, education,
public health, environment, housing, zoning,
economic and industrial policy, agriculture,
foreign trade, and oversight of provincial and
local governments. They rely on a system of
revenue sharing with the federal government for
most of their funds. They have the authority to
levy taxes (mostly surcharges) and contract
loans. Moreover, they have obtained
treaty-making power for those issues coming
under their respective jurisdictions.
Of total public spending--interest payments
not considered--more than 40% is authorized by
the regions and communities.
Provincial and Local Government
In addition to three regions and three cultural
communities, Belgium also is divided into 10
provinces and 589 municipalities.
The provincial governments are primarily
administrative units and are politically weak. A
governor appointed by the King presides over
each province. Each governor is supported by an
elected Provincial Council of 47 to 84 members
(depending on the size of the province), which
sits only four weeks a year.
Municipal governments, on the other hand, are
vigorous political entities with significant
powers and a history of independence dating from
medieval times. Many national politicians
originate from municipal political bases; and
many often double as mayor or alderman in their
hometowns in addition to their federal and
regional political positions.
Political Parties
From the creation of the Belgian state in 1830
and throughout most of the 19th century, two
political parties dominated Belgian politics:
the Catholic Party and the Liberal Party. In the
late 19th century the Socialist Party arose,
representing the emerging industrial working
class. These three groups still dominate Belgian
governments, but they have evolved substantially
in character and face new electoral challengers.
The Christian Democratic Parties.
After World War II, the Catholic (subsequently
Christian Democratic) Party severed its formal
ties with the Church. It became a mass party of
the center (more like a political party in the
United States). In 1968, the Christian
Democratic Party responded to linguistic
tensions in the country by dividing into two
independent parties, now known as the Center
Democratic and Humanistic (CDH) in Francophone
Wallonia and the Flemish Christian Democrats
(CD&V) in Flanders. The two parties share
similar policies but maintain separate
organizations.
The Socialist Parties. The modern
Belgian Socialist parties are labor-based
parties. Despite the post-World War II dominance
of the Christian Democrats, the Socialists
headed several postwar governments. The
Socialists also split along linguistic lines in
1978. The francophone Socialists dominate the
cities and towns of Wallonia and Brussels. The
Flemish Socialists' support is less
concentrated.
The Liberal Parties. In
modern times, the Liberal Parties in Belgium
have chiefly appealed to business people,
property owners, shopkeepers, and the
self-employed. In American terms, the Liberals'
positions could be considered to reflect a more
conservative free market oriented economic
ideology. This non-interventionist ideology is
reflected also in the parties' strong support
for gay marriage, homosexual adoption, and
euthanasia. The two current Liberal parties were
formed in 1971, after the original all-Belgium
Liberal Party split along linguistic lines. They
are the Flemish Liberals and Democrats (VLD)
(Prime Minister Verhofstadt's party) in Flanders
and the Reform Movement (MR) in Wallonia.
Greens. The Flemish (Groen!) and
Francophone (ECOLO) ecologist parties made their
Parliamentary breakthrough in 1981. Following
significant gains in the 1999 general elections,
the two Green parties joined a federal coalition
cabinet for the first time in their history in
Prime Minister Verhofstadt's first six-party
coalition government. The parties experienced
significant losses in the May 2003 election,
however; with ECOLO winning only four seats in
the House and AGALEV failing to win any seats.
They were thus excluded from the new coalition
formed by returning Liberal Prime Minister
Verhofstadt in 2003. Following the election,
AGALEV changed its name to "Groen!."
The Linguistic Parties. A postwar
phenomenon in Belgium was the emergence of
linguistic-based parties, which were formed to
defend the cultural, political, and economic
interests of one of the linguistic groups or
regions of Belgian society.
The far-right Vlaams Belang (Flemish
Interest) is the most militant Flemish regional
party, with a separatist, anti-immigration, law
and order platform. The Vlaams Belang was
formerly called the Vlaams Bloc, until a 2004
high-court ruling confirmed a lower court
verdict that the Bloc was a "racist" party.
Faced with further legal problems, the Bloc
disbanded and resurrected itself as the Vlaams
Belang, with the same party leaders but a less
radical party policy. Late 2005 polls showed the
Vlaams Belang as the second most popular
political party in Flanders, after the Christian
Democrats, and ahead of the Flemish Socialists
and Liberals. Its predecessor, the Vlaams Blok,
had broken out of its "fringe" party status in
the 1991 federal election, when it posted
significant electoral support in much of
Flanders, especially Antwerp. The Bloc continued
to gain in popularity in each successive federal
and regional election. In the 2004 regional
elections, the Bloc received 24% of the votes in
Flanders, with only the alliance of CD&V and NVA
winning more votes at 26.3%.
In Wallonia, the small Francophone
nationalist Front National (FN) surprised many
political pundits by gaining enough votes in the
May 2003 federal election to survive the new 5%
cutoff limit for votes in any precinct required
to enter Parliament. FN retained its 1 Chamber
seat and gained 2 new Senate seats.
The now-defunct Volksunie Party (VU) was the
most militant Flemish regional party in
Parliament in the 1950s and 1960s, drawing
nearly one-quarter of Belgium's Dutch-speaking
electorate at the height of its popularity.
However, as much of the VU's nationalist agenda
was realized through subsequent Constitutional
reforms that saw the devolution of significant
power to the Regions, the VU suffered severe
setbacks in more recent elections, winning only
8 seats in the 150-seat Chamber in 1999. In
2001, Volksunie splintered into a traditional
Flemish nationalist faction, the NVA (currently
in alliance with the CD&V since before the 2004
regional election), and a more liberal faction,
Spirit (in an electoral alliance with the
Flemish Socialist Party since before the 2003
federal election).
Labor Unions
Belgium is a highly unionized country, and
organized labor has been a powerful influence in
politics, although less so in recent elections.
About 53% of all private sector and public
service employees are labor union members.
Unlike many American unions, Belgian labor
unions take positions on a wide range of
political issues, including education, public
finance, defense spending, environmental
protection, women's rights, abortion, and other
issues. They also provide a range of services,
including the administration of unemployment
benefits and health insurance programs.
Belgium's three principal trade union
organizations are the Confederation of Catholic
Labor Unions (CSC/ACV), the Belgian Socialist
Confederation of Labor (FGTB/ABVV), and the
Confederation of Liberal Labor Unions
(CGSLB/ACLVB). Until the 1950s, the FGTB/ABVV
was the largest confederation; since then,
however, the CSC/ACV has become the leading
trade union force.
The Confederation of Catholic Labor Unions
(CSC/ACV). Organized in 1912, the CSC/ACV
rejected the Marxist concept of "class struggle"
and seeks to achieve a just social order based
on Christian principles. The CSC/ACV is not
formally linked to its party political
counterparts, the Christian Democratic parties
(CD&V and CDH) but exercises influence in their
councils. The CSC/ACV is the leading union in
all Flemish provinces and in Wallonia's
Luxembourg province. It has almost equal
strength with the socialist confederation in the
Brussels area.
The Belgian Socialist Confederation of
Labor (FGTB/ABVV). The FGTB/ABVV derives
from the Socialist Trade Union Movement,
established in the late 19th century in Walloon
industrial areas, Brussels, and urban areas of
Flanders. Today, the FGTB/ABVV is the leading
union in the Hainaut, Namur, and Liège provinces
and matches the CSC/ACV in Brussels.
The Confederation of Liberal Labor Unions
(CGSLB/ACLVB). With 240,000 members, this is
the smallest of the major union groups. Drawing
primarily from management positions, the
Brussels-based CGLB/ACVB is Belgium's most
pro-business union. The union is not formally
affiliated with any political party.
Current Issues
Belgium is a member of the European Economic and
Monetary Union. Budgetary issues remain a key
concern of the Verhofstadt government,
particularly given the slow economic growth
Belgium and most of Europe have experienced of
late.
Belgium's reaction to the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks was strong and supportive. For
example, Belgium played a key role in helping to
obtain EU-wide agreement on a European arrest
warrant and in facilitating extradition of
terrorist suspects. In support of Operation
Enduring Freedom, Belgium contributed a navy
frigate in the Mediterranean, AWAC crews for
surveillance flights over the United States, as
well as aircraft for humanitarian assistance to
Afghanistan. Belgium has contributed ground
troops to ISAF since 2002 and provides
humanitarian and reconstruction assistance to
both Afghanistan and Iraq.
Current issues before the Verhofstadt
government include improving the climate for
foreign investment, dealing with rising health
care costs, and adjusting the federal social
security system to a rapidly aging population.
Belgium continues to increase its
counter-terrorism capabilities by adding
domestic legislative, judicial, intelligence,
and law enforcement tools that increase its
ability to prevent or respond to terrorism. The
government also cooperates closely with other
European states and the United States in
investigating cases of international terrorism.
A Brussels trial of al-Qaida-related defendants
ended in September 2003 with sentences for 18 of
the 23 accused, with another 2004
terrorist-related trial resulting in 8 more
guilty verdicts. In November 2005, Belgium
arrested fourteen on terrorism charges. Belgium
operates within UN and EU frameworks concerning
the freezing of terrorist assets, but has yet to
develop a domestic legal framework to act
independently.
ECONOMY
Belgium, a highly developed market economy,
belongs to the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD), a group of
leading industrialized democracies. With a
geographic area about equal to that of Maryland,
and a population of 10.4 million, Belgian per
capita GDP ranks among the world’s highest. In
2005, the per capita income (PPP) was $35,749.
The federal government has managed to present
balanced budgets in recent years, but public
debt remains high, at 94% at the end of 2005.
GDP growth in 2005 is predicted to be 1.4%,
slightly above the Euro-zone average.
Densely populated Belgium is located at the
heart of one of the world's most highly
industrialized regions. The first country to
undergo an industrial revolution on the
continent of Europe in the early 1800s, Belgium
developed an excellent transportation
infrastructure of ports, canals, railways, and
highways to integrate its industry with that of
its neighbors. One of the founding members of
the European Community (EC), Belgium strongly
supports deepening the powers of the present-day
European Union to integrate European economies
further.
With exports equivalent to over two-thirds of
GNP, Belgium depends heavily on world trade.
Belgium's trade advantages are derived from its
central geographic location and a highly
skilled, multilingual, and productive work
force.
The Belgian industrial sector can be compared
to a complex processing machine: It imports raw
materials and semi-finished goods that are
further processed and re-exported. Except for
its coal, which is no longer economical to
exploit, Belgium has virtually no natural
resources. Nonetheless, most traditional
industrial sectors are represented in the
economy, including steel, textiles, refining,
chemicals, food processing, pharmaceuticals,
automobiles, electronics, and machinery
fabrication. Despite the heavy industrial
component, services account for 74.6% of GDP.
Agriculture accounts for only 1.4% of the GDP.
Belgian Economy in the 20th Century
For 200 years through World War I,
French-speaking Wallonia was a technically
advanced, industrial region, while
Dutch-speaking Flanders was predominantly
agricultural. This disparity began to fade
during the interwar period. As Belgium emerged
from World War II with its industrial
infrastructure relatively undamaged, the stage
was set for a period of rapid development,
particularly in Flanders. The postwar boom years
contributed to the rapid expansion of light
industry throughout most of Flanders,
particularly along a corridor stretching between
Brussels and Antwerp (now the second-largest
port in Europe after Rotterdam), where a major
concentration of petrochemical industries
developed.
The older, traditional industries of
Wallonia, particularly steelmaking, began to
lose their competitive edge during this period,
but the general growth of world prosperity
masked this deterioration until the 1973 and
1979 oil price shocks sent the economy into a
period of prolonged recession. In the 1980s and
1990s, the economic center of the country
continued to shift northward to Flanders.
Foreign Investment
Foreign investment contributed significantly to
Belgian economic growth in the 1960s. In
particular, U.S. firms played a leading role in
the expansion of light industrial and
petrochemical industries in the 1960s and 1970s.
The Belgian Government encourages new foreign
investment as a means to promote employment.
With regional devolution, Flanders, Brussels,
and Wallonia now have substantial autonomy in
courting potential foreign investors, as each
deems appropriate.
More than 1,400 U.S. firms invested over $25
billion in Belgium by 2003. U.S. and other
foreign companies in Belgium account for
approximately 11% of the total work force, with
the U.S. share at about 6%. U.S. companies are
heavily represented in the chemical sector,
automotive assembly, and petroleum refining. A
number of U.S. service industries followed in
the wake of these investments--banks, law firms,
public relations, accounting, and executive
search firms. The resident American community in
Belgium now exceeds 20,000. Attracted by the EU
1992 single-market program, many U.S. law firms
and lawyers have settled in Brussels since 1989.
Monetary
On May 1, 1998, Belgium became a first-tier
member of the European Monetary Union. Belgium
switched from the Belgian franc (BF) to the Euro
as its currency after January 1, 2002.
Trade
About 75% of Belgium's trade is with fellow EU
member states. Given this high percentage,
Belgium seeks to diversify and expand trade
opportunities with non-EC countries. Belgium
ranks as the 11th-largest market for the export
of U.S. goods and services. If goods in transit
to other European countries are excluded,
Belgium ranks as the 12th-largest market for
U.S. goods.
Bilaterally, there are few points of friction
with the U.S. in the trade and economic area.
The Belgian authorities are, as a rule,
anti-protectionist and try to maintain a
hospitable and open trade and investment
climate. As a result, the U.S. Government
focuses its market-opening efforts on the EU
Commission and larger member states. Moreover,
the Commission negotiates on trade issues for
all member states, which, in turn lessens
bilateral trade disputes with Belgium.
Employment
The social security system, which expanded
rapidly during the prosperous 1950s and 1960s,
includes a medical system, unemployment
insurance coverage, child allowances, invalid
benefits, and other benefits and pensions. With
the onset of a recession in the 1970s, this
system became an increasing burden on the
economy and accounted for much of the government
budget deficits. The national unemployment
figures mask considerable differences between
Flanders and Wallonia. Unemployment in Wallonia
is mainly structural, while in Flanders it is
cyclical. Flanders' unemployment level equals
only half that of Wallonia. The southern region
continues a difficult transition out of sunset
industries (mainly coal and steel), while
sunrise industries (chemicals, high-tech, and
services) dominate in Flanders.
Belgium’s unemployment rate was 8.4% in 2005.
A total of 4.4 million people make up Belgium’s
labor force. The majority of these people (73%)
work in the service sector. Belgian industry
claims 25% of the labor force and agriculture
only 2%. As in other industrialized nations,
pension and other social entitlement programs
have become a major concern as the "baby boom"
generation approaches retirement.
Budget
Although Belgium is a wealthy country, public
expenditures far exceeded income for many years,
and taxes were not diligently pursued. The
Belgian Government reacted with poor
macroeconomic policies to the 1973 and 1979 oil
price hikes by hiring the redundant work force
into the public sector and subsidizing
industries like coal, steel, textiles, glass,
and shipbuilding, which had lost their
international competitive edge. As a result,
cumulative government debt reached 121% of GDP
by the end of the 1980s. However, thanks to
Belgium's high personal savings rate, the
Belgian Government financed the deficit from
mainly domestic savings, minimizing the
deleterious effects on the overall economy.
The federal government ran a 7.1% budget
deficit in 1992 at the time of the EU’s Treaty
of Maastricht, which established conditions for
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) that led to
adoption of the common Euro currency on January
1, 2002. Among other criteria spelled out under
the Maastricht treaty, the Belgian Government
had to attain a budget deficit of no greater
than 3% of GDP by the end of 1997; Belgium
achieved this, with a total budget deficit in
2001 (just prior to implementation of the Euro
currency) that amounted to 0.2% of GDP. The
government has balanced the budget every year
since. Belgium’s accumulated public debt remains
high, but the liberal-socialist coalition
government has paid it down to 94% of 2005 GDP.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
The Concert of Nations sanctioned the creation
of Belgium in 1830 on the condition that the
country remains strictly neutral. During the two
World Wars Belgium tried but was unable to
follow a policy of neutrality due to the German
invasions. In 1948, Belgium signed the Treaty of
Brussels with Great Britain, France, the
Netherlands, and Luxembourg, and a year later
became one of the founding members of NATO.
Belgium remains a strong proponent of both
NATO and European defense efforts. Belgium also
is a strong advocate of strengthening economic
and political integration within the EU. Having
federalized their own country, many Belgians
view themselves as the ultimate "European
federalists."
Both NATO (since 1966) and the EU have their
headquarters in Brussels; SHAPE (Supreme
Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, NATO's
military headquarters) is in the south of the
country, near Mons.
Belgium supported the expansion of NATO and
EU membership to the new democracies of central
and eastern Europe and is actively engaged in
the Organization for Security and Cooperation
(OSCE) in Europe. Belgium will serve as the
Chair-in-Office of the OSCE in 2006.
U.S.-BELGIAN RELATIONS
The United States and Belgium are good friends
and allies, despite occasional disagreements on
a limited number of foreign policy issues. Good
will and affection for Americans continues as a
result of the U.S. role during and after the two
World Wars, most recently exhibited in 2004
during the 60th anniversary
commemorations of the Battle of the Bulge and
the liberation of Belgium.
The U.S. appreciates Belgian activism in
international affairs including its
participation in the International Security
Assistance Force in Afghanistan, its
reconstruction and development assistance to
Iraq, its peacekeeping missions in the Balkans,
its frequent provision of airlift in
international crises, and its hosting of a 2005
transatlantic dialogue between European foreign
ministers and the Secretary of State. During the
January 17, 2006 visit by Prime Minister
Verhofstadt, President Bush thanked him for his
"leadership" in helping "the people of the Congo
realize their full potential." The U.S.
continues to believe that Belgium could be even
more active in sharing the international
security burden.
As an outward-looking nation, Belgium works
closely with the United States bilaterally and
in international and regional organizations to
encourage economic and political cooperation and
assistance to developing countries. Belgium has
welcomed hundreds of U.S. firms to its
territory, many of which have their European
headquarters there.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Tom
C. Korologos
Deputy Chief of Mission--William Imbrie
Political Counselor--Theodore H. Andrews
Economic Counselor--Terri L. Robl
Management Counselor--Kathleen Austin-Ferguson
Commercial Counselor--Camille Sailer
Regional Security Officer--Scot Folensbee
Public Affairs Counselor--Chris Rochester
Consul--Hale C. VanKoughnett
The
U.S. Embassy in Belgium is located at 27
Boulevard du Régent, 1000 Brussels (tel.
02/501-2111, fax 02/511-2725). The European
Logistical Support Office (ELSO) is at
Norrderlaan 147, Box 12A, 2030 Antwerp (tel.
03/542-4775, fax 03/542-6567). The Consular
section in Brussels is located at 25 Boulevard
du Régent.
U.S. Mission to NATO
Permanent U.S. Representative to NATO (USNATO)--Victoria
J. Nuland
Deputy Chief of Mission, USNATO--John M. Koenig
The U.S. Mission to NATO (USNATO) is at NATO
Headquarters, on the Autoroute de Zaventem, 1110
Brussels (tel. 02/724-3111, fax 02/726-5796).
U.S. Mission to the EU
Ambassador to the European Union--C. Boyden Gray
Deputy Chief of Mission, USEU--Mike McKinley
The U.S. Mission to the EU is located at 15,
rue Zinner, 1000 Brussels (tel. 02/508-2222, fax
02/514-4339).