Belgium often features in Western media as a country on the edge of disintegration. The Flemish and Walloon nations are perennially at each other’s throats, seeking different political, social, and economic objectives. Often the Flemish are after independence while the Walloons are simply attempting to deal with the increase in poverty that has accompanied deindustrialization.
These battles matter little, however. The Belgian population, a White population, is being steadily replaced by foreigners from both inside and outside of Europe.
Belgium has undergone one of the most radical demographic transformations in the West and without policy changes, Belgians will become a minority in their own country in relatively short order. Luckily Belgium has a policy, legal, and even political environment which if properly utilized could reverse the trend of the Great Replacement in the country.
The Current Situation:
In 2023 Statbel, the Belgian Statistics Office, reported that Belgians with a Belgian background are just 65.5% of the country’s population. The Belgian population of Belgium has fallen some 16.3 percentage points since the year 2001 when Belgians made up a much healthier 81.8% share of the country’s population.
In this same 22-year time period the population of Belgians with a foreign background, meaning both naturalized immigrants and second-generation immigrants, has increased substantially. In 2001 Belgians with a Foreign background were just 9.8% of the population of Belgium but today they stand at 21% of the population. The number of Africans has increased fourfold from 210,000 in 2001 to well over 823,000 as of 2023. Similarly, the Asian population has nearly quadrupled from 54,000 in 2001 to 199,302 as of 2023 and these are just the foreign background categories.
The final category in the country is Non-Belgians (those without citizenship), which Statbel says makeup 13.4% of the population as of 2023. This is almost double the 8.4% share that Non-Belgians (non-citizens) held in 2001.
In total, the share of people who are not of true Belgian origin has increased from a less-than-ideal 18.2% share of the Belgian population in 2001 to a concerningly high share of 33.4% as of 2023.