Regional budget: the silent erosion
BlockedThis issue cannot move forward without a new government.
Without a new government, the Brussels-Capital Region operates on provisional twelfths. No new budget, no new investments. Inflation erodes the real value of existing expenditure.
What this means in practice
No new budget can be voted. The Region operates on the basis of the previous budget, rolled over through provisional twelfths. New investments are legally impossible and the real value of existing expenditure is eroded by inflation.
Key figures
Provisional twelfths
Budget regime
~1.241billion EUR
Annual budget deficit (2025)
Voted 12/12/2025covers Q1 2026
Provisional twelfths (5th ordinance)
15.65billion EUR (x3 since 2016)
Consolidated gross debt
399million EUR (x4.4 since 2016)
Annual interest charges
~6%over 2 years
Estimated real loss (cumulative inflation)
0projects launched
New investments
What are provisional twelfths?
When a government is in caretaker mode, it cannot have a new budget approved by Parliament. The provisional twelfths mechanism applies: each month, the Region may spend a maximum of 1/12th of the last approved budget.
In practice, this means:
- No new expenditure beyond what was planned in the last budget (the 2024 budget, voted before the elections).
- No new programmes — any project that was not already budgeted is blocked.
- Inflation is not compensated — if prices rise, the real value of expenditure decreases automatically.
The concrete impact
Erosion through inflation
With cumulative inflation of approximately 6% between Q4 2023 budget design and early 2026 (based on Statbel indices), the 2026 provisional twelfths buy approximately 6% less than the original 2024 budget. Civil servants receive their indexed salary, but investments and subsidies remain at the 2024 nominal level.
Frozen investments
Any investment that required a new political decision is at a standstill:
- No new funding envelopes for Master Development Plans (PAD)
- No refinancing of management contracts that have expired
- No new calls for projects in most regional administrations
Regional debt sharply rising
The Court of Auditors issued an adverse opinion on the Region's 2024 accounts, citing "significant anomalies". The consolidated gross debt has tripled since 2016, rising from 4.6 to 15.65 billion EUR. Annual interest charges have increased 4.4-fold: from 91 million in 2016 to 399 million EUR in 2024, with a projected 548 million by 2029. The gap between the projected deficit (-1.080B) and the actual deficit (-1.515B) in 2024 was 434.8 million EUR.
Shutdown risk narrowly averted
At the end of 2025, Belfius -- the Region's main creditor -- had announced the end of its credit line on 1 January 2026. The contract was ultimately extended by one year (50 million EUR). Without this extension, the Region would no longer have been able to pay its civil servants and maintain basic services.
Subsidies and agreements
Multi-year agreements between the Region and subsidised organisations (associations, cultural institutions, etc.) that expire cannot be renewed by a caretaker government. Only existing commitments with a legal basis continue.
Sources and methodology
The budget figures come from official documents of the Brussels Parliament and reports by the Court of Audit. The estimate of the real loss due to inflation is calculated by BGM based on consumer price indices published by Statbel and the National Bank of Belgium. This estimate uses the simplifying assumption of a constant nominal budget, which underestimates the real impact (certain items such as salaries are indexed automatically, which correspondingly reduces the margins for other expenditure).
Sources
- Court of Audit — 30th Book of Observations to the Brussels-Capital Parliament (Nov. 2025)(accessed on 6 February 2026)
- Court of Audit — Report on provisional appropriations Jan-Mar 2025 (PDF)(accessed on 6 February 2026)
- Ordinance on provisional appropriations Jan-Mar 2026 — legal text (Reflex)(accessed on 6 February 2026)
- IBSA — Focus No. 73: Public statistics and Brussels budget situation (Jul. 2025)(accessed on 6 February 2026)
- Statbel — Consumer Price Index (CPI)(accessed on 6 February 2026)
- NBB — Regional flows and (im)balances in Belgium (Oct. 2025, PDF)(accessed on 6 February 2026)
- RTBF — A severe Court of Auditors report (Nov. 2025)(accessed on 8 February 2026)
- RTBF — Brussels shutdown narrowly avoided (Dec. 2025)(accessed on 8 February 2026)
- Brussels Parliament — Official website(accessed on 8 February 2026)
Last updated: 8 February 2026
What BGM does not say
This card does not say that the current budget is inherently insufficient — it documents that the absence of a new budget prevents any adaptation to current economic realities. The correlation between caretaker government and budgetary deterioration is not presented as direct causation.
No change detected
Verified on 8 Feb 2026
Les sources consultées confirment que la situation budgétaire décrite dans la carte Budget est inchangée. La Région fonctionne toujours en douzièmes provisoires. Aucune nouvelle ordonnance budgétaire n'a été adoptée depuis le vote du 5 février 2026.
Next verification planned: 8 Mar 2026
Follow this topic by email
Max. 1 email/week. Unsubscribe in 1 click.