Mortality
Nearly 65,000 deaths in 2023
In 2023, a total of 64,670 residents of the Flemish Region died (in the ). That is 2,858 fewer than in 2022. Compared to the peak year of 2020, 6,249 fewer residents of the Flemish Region died (-8.8%).
In 2023, again fewer births than deaths
In 2023, there were again fewer births than deaths in the Flemish Region: 62,338 births compared to 64,670 deaths. This resulted in a negative of -2,332. The number of deaths also exceeded the number of births in 2020 and 2022. In 2020 there was a negative natural balance of -8,121; in 2022 this amounted to –4,244.
Between 2000 and 2019 as well as in 2021, there were increasingly more births than deaths in the Flemish Region. This always gave a positive natural balance.
Large municipal variation in the crude mortality rate in 2022-2023
144 cities and municipalities had a crude mortality rate higher than the average for the Flemish Region (9.8 per 1,000) inhabitants in 2022-2023. Relatively high values were recorded especially, but not exclusively, in the coastal municipalities, with their older population. Municipalities with relatively low crude mortality rates were found in the northern half of Limburg, the Noorderkempen and in an extensive region around the Brussels Capital Region.
Of the central cities, Leuven (7.9), Mechelen (8.4), Antwerp (8.6), Ghent (8.8), Sint-Niklaas (9.4), Turnhout (9.4) and Roeselare ( 9.6) lower than the Flemish average. Genk (10.2), Aalst (10.4), Hasselt (10.5), Kortrijk (10.8), Bruges (11.7) and Ostend (14.5) recorded above-average values.
Flemish Region below the EU average for the crude mortality rate
The Flemish Region and Belgium (both 10.0) score lower than the European average (11.5) for the crude mortality rate of 2022. Member states with relatively high scores are Bulgaria and Latvia. Member States with low scores are Ireland and Luxembourg. In part, the ranking also reflects the age structure of the total population in the Member States, with generally high scores for countries with older populations and low scores for countries with younger populations.