Croatia–Netherlands relations

Croatian-Dutch are foreign relations between Croatia and Netherlands. Both countries established diplomatic relations on April 23, 1992. Croatia has an embassy in The Hague. The Netherlands have an embassy in Zagreb and 3 honorary consulates (in Dubrovnik, Opatija and Split). Both countries are full members of the European Union and NATO. Both The Netherlands joined the EU in Founder, and Croatia joined the EU in 2013.

Croatian-Dutch relations

Croatia

Netherlands

Country comparison

Croatia the Netherlands
Coat of arms
Population 4,076,246 17,237,700[1]
Area 56,594 km2 (260,558 sq mi) 41,543 km² (16,033 sq mi)
Population Density 73/km2 (21,851/sq mi) 415.1/km² (1,075.1/sq mi)
Capital Zagreb Amsterdam (capital), The Hague (seat of government)
Largest City Zagreb – 790,017 (1,228,941 Metro) Amsterdam – 851,573 (2,431,000 Metro)
Global Cities Zagreb, Split, Rijeka, Osijek, Dubrovnik, Koprivnica, Varaždin, Pula, Velika Gorica. Amsterdam, Eindhoven, Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht, Maastricht, Assen, Groningen, Zwolle, Enschede, Arnhem, Noordwijk, Alkmaar, Zandvoort.
Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional republic Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
Official language Croatian Dutch
Current Leader President Zoran Milanović
Prime Minister Andrej Plenković
Monarch Willem-Alexander
Prime Minister Mark Rutte
Main religions 86.28% Roman Catholicism,
4.57% Irreligious,
4.44% Eastern Orthodoxy, 1.47% Islam, 2.90% others
50.1% unaffiliated, 23.7% Roman Catholic, 6.5% Dutch Reformed Church, 5.7% Protestant Church in the Netherlands, 3.3% Reformed Churches in the Netherlands, 4.9% Islam, 4.6% other, 0.6% Hinduism, 0.4% Buddhism, 0.1% Judaism[2][3]
Ethnic groups 90.42% Croats,
4.36% Serbs, 5.22% Others
79.3% Dutch, 6.3% other European, 4.9% Indo, 2.4% Turkish, 2.2% Moroccan-Dutch, 2.1% Surinamese, 0.9% Caribbean, 0.3% Chinese, 0.3% Iraqi, 3.9% other
GDP (PPP) $117.928 billion ($29,207 per capita) $945.327 billion[4]

Diplomacy

See also

References

  1. "Population counter". Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek. 2017. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  2. Schmeets, Hans (2016). De religieuze kaart van Nederland, 2010–2015 (PDF). Centraal Bureau voor der Statistiek. p. 5.
  3. CBS. "Helft Nederlanders is kerkelijk of religieus". www.cbs.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2017-10-17.
  4. "Netherlands". International Monetary Fund. April 2018.,
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