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    Home » Belgium cuts €500 million from federal civil service
    Business

    Belgium cuts €500 million from federal civil service

    January 7, 2026
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    EuroWire, BRUSSELS: Belgium’s federal government will cut close to €500 million from its civil service budget over the next several years, according to newly released budget documents. The measures are part of a fiscal consolidation plan designed to reduce federal spending through staff reduction limits and increased pension contributions for newly appointed permanent officials. Under the new policy, government departments will be permitted to replace only two out of every five employees who leave their positions until each department reaches its designated savings target. The measure applies across the federal civil service but excludes essential sectors such as the police, Defence, Justice, Home Affairs, and the Immigration Office. These exemptions are intended to maintain operational capacity in key security and justice institutions.

    Belgium cuts €500 million from federal civil service
    Government offices implement spending cuts under Belgium’s 2026 fiscal reform plan.

    The partial hiring freeze is expected to generate approximately €100 million in savings during 2026, with cumulative savings reaching around €175 million by 2029. Officials said the move forms part of broader cost-containment measures being introduced to align federal spending with Belgium’s long-term fiscal targets. The initiative reflects a shift toward tighter workforce management across government departments, focusing on reducing administrative costs while maintaining service continuity in essential areas. A second component of the cost-saving plan involves an adjustment to employer pension contributions for newly appointed statutory civil servants. Under this reform, federal services and state-owned companies will progressively increase their employer contributions to cover future pension liabilities.

    The contribution rate will start at 9.5 percent in 2026 and gradually rise to 38 percent by 2029. The measure is structured to ensure that new entrants to the public sector are covered under a more financially sustainable pension model. The incremental contribution increases are designed to reduce the long-term funding gap in the federal pension system and align employer obligations more closely with the actual cost of future benefits. According to government projections, the federal pensions service will receive an additional €100 million in 2027, with the amount growing to €284 million by 2029. These funds are expected to strengthen pension reserves and provide greater financial stability to the public sector retirement system. Together, the staffing and pension reforms are projected to yield a total of €459 million in savings by 2029.

    Federal savings forecast to reach €459 million by 2029

    The measures are a component of Belgium’s wider plan to achieve €9.2 billion in total budgetary savings over the coming years. The federal government has committed to these targets as part of its broader fiscal policy framework, which aims to control expenditure growth and maintain compliance with European Union budgetary requirements. The budget documents detail how the hiring restrictions and pension contribution changes will be implemented gradually across all federal departments. Ministries have been instructed to monitor compliance with the new staff replacement ratio and to submit annual progress reports to the Ministry of the Civil Service. Departments that reach their individual savings targets ahead of schedule may be permitted limited flexibility in recruitment, provided that overall expenditure remains within the approved budget ceiling.

    The Belgian government’s broader financial strategy focuses on maintaining balanced fiscal management while addressing structural spending pressures. The civil service adjustments are part of a multi-year budget plan extending to 2029, which includes measures affecting several sectors of public administration. These include administrative consolidation, improved cost monitoring, and the optimization of pension-related expenditures. In total, the federal civil service employs roughly 65,000 staff across departments, agencies, and public institutions. The new staffing rule will therefore have a measurable impact on hiring patterns and workforce planning in the coming years. The government has emphasized that critical public functions will remain unaffected by the hiring limits, ensuring that areas related to public safety, defense, and judicial operations continue to operate at full capacity.

    Reforms reinforce Belgium’s commitment to fiscal discipline

    Belgium’s 2026 budget outlines a series of reforms aimed at reducing structural expenditure while sustaining essential services and maintaining fiscal credibility within the European Union’s fiscal framework. The civil service measures form a significant part of these efforts, focusing on long-term cost containment through targeted workforce and pension adjustments. Once fully implemented, the combination of restricted recruitment and revised pension contributions is expected to deliver nearly half a billion euros in recurring savings. The policy marks a notable step in Belgium’s ongoing efforts to stabilize federal finances and manage public spending in a more sustainable manner over the remainder of the decade, reinforcing the government’s commitment to fiscal discipline, administrative efficiency, and the modernization of public sector management practices across federal institutions.

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