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The population of Brussels: a demographic overview
Introduction
On 1 January 2008, the Brussels Region had 1.048.491 inhabitants. The population in Brussels is the youngest one in the country. Over the past 50 years, the demographic development has been strongly influenced by migration. And this is still the case today. In Brussels, most of the world’s nationalities are represented. In addition, the forecasts foresee a strong population increase over the next decades and the pressure on the housing offer is currently pretty strong. There are several questions that rise: can Brussels absorb 200.000 new inhabitants? Will housing become unaffordable in Brussels? Does Brussels invest enough in its youth?
Description
The Brussels-Capital Region is comprised of 19 municipalities and has a surface area of 161.4 km2. The region is the core of a much broader morphological agglomeration made up of 36 municipalities with a total population of more than one and a half million inhabitants. The official population of the Brussels-Capital Region totalled 1,048,491 inhabitants on 1st January 2008 and is the youngest in the country with an average age of 37.8 years recorded in 2006. The demographic development of Brussels has always been strongly dominated by migration over the past one and half centuries and this is not different today. The capital city has experienced a rise in population over the past few years and, just like all large European cities, the population composition is highly influenced by  internationalisation. The last census (socio-economic survey of 2001) enabled the nationality of origin to be taken into account. According to this criterion, Brussels had 45 different nationalities with at least 1,000 inhabitants. The composition has diversified further since then and there has been an increase in inhabitants from European Union countries. The region is characterised by a clear spatial differentiation between the  poorer districts, mixed neighbourhoods and the affluent areas of the city. The underlying structure of this spatial segregation according to socio-economic status has deep-seated historical roots and a high level of inertia. However, the arrival of new inhabitants, large construction sites within a number of districts, speculation and increasing property prices are slowly changing the composition of the population within some districts. A short description of the most important demographic trends that will affect the composition of the city in the coming decades is given in this article.
Background information
Questions and issues
  1. Erosion of incomes
  2. Socio-economic spatial residential pattern
  3. Increasing population pressure
  4. Finding an answer to growing polarisation
Knowledge dissemination
Published in Brussels Studies, the e-journal for academic research on Brussels, in cooperation with the Citizens Forum of Brussels.
Contact info
Brussels Studies
info@brusselsstudies.be
www.brusselsstudies.be
Michel Hubert (Editor-in-Chief), tel. +32 485 41 67 64
Publication date
12/01/2009
Researcher
P. Deboosere, T. Eggerickx, E. Van Hecke, and B. Wayens
Links
Click here to download the article "The population of Brussels: a demographic overview"

Document type
research
Themes
Urban Policy
Keywords
 


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