(1812–1896), architect of the creation of CGER (1801–1891), the CGER's founding chairman The institution was the brainchild of Belgian statesman
Walthère Frère-Orban, who by law of created Belgium's (), and on transformed it into the CGER by expanding it with a savings bank (). One of Frère-Orban's aims was to mitigate the dominance of the
Société Générale de Belgique in the Belgian financial system, a concern that also led to his creation of the
National Bank of Belgium in 1850 following limited success of an earlier attempt, the
Banque de Belgique, created in 1835 but which underwent financial stress in 1848. Frère-Orban intended the CGER to provide savings and pension services to workers and the general public, taking inspiration from savings banks in neighboring countries and particularly
German Sparkassen. The CGER was thus established as a
sui generis public-sector entity guaranteed by the Belgian state. In 1870, the CGER started distributing its services through the Belgian network of
post offices, making it in practice the country's
postal savings system, after having previously used the network of the National Bank. The number of savings accounts () held at the CGER grew rapidly, reaching 730,000 in 1890 and 3.1 million in 1913. The CGER was gradually authorized by the Belgian government to diversify its activity into more banking services offerings. In 1884 the CGER started to provide agricultural loans. From 1889 it started providing mortgages to workers and related life insurance services. From 1903 it offered workplace insurance through the . In the first half of the 20th century, it was heavily involved in the financing of Belgium's housing and agricultural development policies. After
World War II, it expanded further into
export credit and lending to industry, and also lent significantly to the Belgian state itself. from 1959 it started building up its own branch network, and in 1975 was eventually granted a general banking license. In 1980 it was also authorized to expand abroad. In 1992 it became a joint-stock holding company, in French CGER-Holding, with two main subsidiaries for banking and insurance services respectively, in French CGER-Banque and CGER-Assurances. In 1993,
Fortis Group acquired half of the equity of both the banking and insurance subsidiaries from the Belgian state, then further raised its stake to 74.9 percent in 1997 and 100 percent in 1998. Meanwhile, in 1996 it took over the
Société Nationale de Crédit à l'Industrie, another Belgian public bank. Fortis eventually merged ASLK/CGER with
Générale de Banque in mid-1999. Since 2009, the former CGER operations have subsequently been part of
BNP Paribas Fortis. ==Brussels headquarters complex==