IELTS Testing Centres in Belgium
In total, there is one test location in Belgium that offer IELTS exams. You can select the one which is closer to you.
List of cities in Belgium where you can take the IELTS tests
- Brussels
There are two types of test format available for IELTS exams: paper-based or computer-delivered. For both formats, the Speaking Section is done with a real IELTS examiner on a face-to-face basis.
Brussels, Belgium – British Council Belgium
Street Address: 108 Rue du Trône/Troonstraat
Contact Email: exams@britishcouncil.be
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.be/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/09/26 | Brussels | IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/10/24 | Brussels | IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/11/7 | Brussels | IELTS Academic | 239 |
2020/11/21 | Brussels | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/11/28 | Brussels | IELTS Academic | 239 |
2020/12/5 | Brussels | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 239 |
IELTS Exam Fee in Belgium
According to the test maker – British Council, the current cost to take IELTS test in Belgium is 239 EUR.
More about Belgium
Business
The Belgian economic system is oriented towards the market economy. Belgium is a founding member of the EC and a member of GATT, International Monetary Fund, World Bank and OECD. A common currency policy was pursued within the Belgian-Luxembourg Economic Union. With the exception of coal (which is no longer mined), Belgium has no significant mineral resources. This scarcity of raw materials and the relatively narrow domestic market mean that foreign trade plays a dominant role in the Belgian economy. The foreign trade quota (exports and imports in relation to the gross domestic product) is 174%, more than twice the EU average. Despite its small size, Belgium is one of the most important industrialized countries in Europe.
In both world wars, the national economy suffered from the German occupation (e.g. deportation of workers). After the Second World War, in particular, the reconstruction was relatively quick thanks to US and Canadian aid and Belgium’s ability to sell various raw materials (including uranium ore) from the Belgian Congo. The economic recovery of the Belgian economy was also strongly promoted by the European unification efforts. An economic crisis brought the Belgian Congo to break away in 1960; the colony had been a source of great wealth for Belgium and especially for some companies (especially for the Union Minière d’Haut-Katanga) because of its mineral resources. To face this crisis
In the 1970s, Belgium began to pursue a regional economic development policy partly supported by EU funds, including: with the aim of setting up young companies in numerous new business parks. A consistent economic stabilization and consolidation policy began in the 1980s. Measures included the 1992 convergence plan aimed at moving closer to the Maastricht criteria for monetary union and the 1993 global plan aimed at increasing competitiveness and improving employment. Successes have been achieved in lowering the inflation rate (1995: 2.2%; 2002: 1.6%; 2015: 0.6%), achieving a positive current account, curbing wage cost increases and reducing national debt, However, in relation to gross domestic product (GDP) with (2017) 103.1%, it is still one of the highest in the EU (Maastricht criterion for monetary union: 60%). Companies’ social security contributions have also been reduced. Although the unemployment rate fell to 7.1% (2017), it was still high in some areas with a large regional spread.
Foreign trade: Exports of (2017) € 381.0 billion compared with imports of € 360.2 billion. Chemical products and pharmaceuticals, vehicles and vehicle parts, machines, as well as food and beverages, achieve high values both for imports and exports. Energy resources such as coal, oil and natural gas are largely imported. The main trading partners are the EU countries (especially the Netherlands, Germany and France) and the USA. The Belgian current account is in surplus.
Agriculture
The heavily mechanized agriculture, which is large-scale in Central Belgium and otherwise small to medium-sized, covers around four fifths of the food requirement. Particularly intensive cultivation methods have long been practiced in Flanders. There are good soils above all in central Belgium and in the polders, poor soils in the sandy areas of Flanders, in the Kempen and in the Ardennes. The agricultural area takes up 43.8% of the total area of Belgium (26.7% arable land, 0.7% permanent crops). The main crops are cereals (especially wheat, barley), root crops (especially sugar beets, potatoes), vegetables (especially greenhouse and open-air crops in the Mechlin – Leuven – Brussels triangle) and fruit (especially in northern Haspengau and Hageland) as well the industrial crops hops, tobacco and flax. Chicory. Cattle farming is almost evenly distributed across the agricultural areas (with a focus on intensity in the Herver Land), while pig farming is particularly intensive in West and East Flanders as well as in the northern Kempen.
Natural resources
The only significant raw material was coal. Before 1955, around 30 million tons of coal were mined annually. All mines are now closed.
A decline in demand, among other things. due to the problems of the iron and steel industry (steel crisis), as well as the competition of cheap imported coal, among others. Energy sources were the cause of the decline.