Belgium Faces €1 Billion Tax Loss Amid EU Asset Freeze, Considers Veto at December Council
December 5, 2025
Clarinval warns that non-European countries could view Belgium as a safe place to move funds, risking capital flight and long-term harm to the country’s financial system.
Belgium refuses unilateral action and seeks broad European guarantees, signaling a potential veto at the December 18 European Council if guarantees are not secured, backed by cross-party support.
Using frozen assets without a solid international framework could set a dangerous precedent, invite retaliation, and damage Belgium’s financial reputation—comparable to disregarding wartime norms.
The discussion references statements from other Belgian politicians, such as Bart De Wever, to illustrate broader implications of the frozen asset debate.
Economy Minister David Clarinval frames frozen Russian assets at Euroclear as an exceptional issue, estimated at about 185 billion euros—roughly one-third of Belgium’s GDP.
A European Commission plan to freeze assets could cost Belgium about one billion euros in tax revenue, heightening political calculations surrounding the issue.
Beyond the asset debate, budget talks loom with potential sector exemptions under consideration, but an on-air announcement remains uncertain as discussions continue.
The unemployment reform is set to be time-limited from January, with regional readiness praised while Brussels is criticized for lacking a governing framework to push reforms.
Georges-Louis Bouchez’s proposal for a tighter Brussels government surfaces amid mixed reactions, highlighting ongoing political maneuvering.
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