Sitemap

Dr Srdjan Verbić, Minister of Education, Science and Technological Development

Education and Science the Basis for Serbia’s Development

By Daron Acemoglu

Will We Squander the AI Opportunity?

For more than 200,000 years, humans have...

Comment

Shaping Global Minds

Serbia’s international schools bridge the gap between...

Comment

Enduring Bonds, Expanding Horizons, Comment

The economic and cultural partnership between Greece...

Anina Milanović, Director of the Sector for International Cooperation and Development at the Securities Commission, expert in digital assets

Welcome to the World of Digital Assets

I believe that science must experience major...

CorD Recommends

SAP SE Overtakes Novo Nordisk in Value

SAP SE’s rise to the top spot underscores the booming demand for cloud computing and AI-driven services. In a stunning...

Carlsberg Rejoins UEFA’s Global Stage

Carlsberg's return to the European football scene marks a new chapter in its decades-long commitment to the sport, as...

EU Summit Discusses Western Balkans Integration

The European Council summit held in Brussels on March 20, 2025, placed a strong emphasis on the integration of...

Business Forum Strengthens Economic Ties Between Serbia and China

On March 20th, the Serbian Chamber of Commerce hosted a significant Business Forum and a series of bilateral meetings...

Norwegian Fund Acquires 25% of Covent Garden

In a strategic show of confidence in London's commercial heart, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund secures a quarter stake in...

Budget cuts always first reflect on activities, and only then on earnings. The way out of such a situation is to create an environment in which small but effective changes are always welcome. There is no reason to set the changing of the entire system as an imperative. Small and sustainable steps are very important, primarily in the field of motivation, which turns out to be the most difficult burden of change in our country. With modest resources, it is not possible to make major organisational or technological breakthroughs, but society needs them, and those small innovations, step by step, improve the quality of life.

The application of science is not a task only for researchers. On the contrary, the appliance of science is a job for engineers and specialists of various kinds, as well as all those who notice that their current practice is not perfect and that there is enough space for innovation. Applying science to production is not as simple as it was a few decades ago.

Globalisation and mass production has ensured that the kind of expertise that a regular school can provide is no longer sufficient for the transfer of knowledge from science to the economy to be efficient. In order to link science and the economy successfully, it is necessary – apart from continuous learning – for all levels of knowledge transfer to be completed well and for competent people to have enough ideas and scientific results, for there to be innovators who will turn some of these ideas into tools to solve specific problems, for there to be investors who will invest in good innovation, for there to be engineers who will develop mass production and, finally, for there to be those who will find a place for a new product on an often already saturated market. This is indeed a great task, and thus innovations originating directly from scientific laboratories, which result in mass production, are rare outside the narrow circle of the most developed countries.

How closely linked science and the economy are can best be seen in the degree to which the economy is devoted to financing scientific research. There is no doubt that the private sector will invest in what will be profitable and will turn a profit in the foreseeable future. If no such interest exists, the pressure exerted by the state to merge the incompatible will not help much. Of course, if interest exists at least in trace amounts, the state should be a catalyst for connections and primarily for all adequate financial instruments to assist in this cooperation.

When the 2016-2020 Strategy for the Scientific and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia was undergoing public debate, one of the most painful issues for established and quite successful researchers was orientation towards innovation

When it comes to innovations that are more related to services than tangible products, the gap between academic knowledge and the successful application of such knowledge to real-world challenges is generally not so great. Not so many links are required in the chain of knowledge application if recycling old clothes is identified as an innovation that simultaneously solves the ecological problem and employs people. We today require innovation of this kind in many fields, e.g. innovations concerning the reduction of social disparities, securing the population’s health, youth employment, care for the elderly etc.

These do not need to be innovations that we have come up with here in Serbia. It is sufficient to implement something that someone else is already working. Unfortunately, this is not always easy due to the specific legal framework. In any case, it is necessary to develop a culture of innovation, which implies supporting small effective solutions rather than that being left to the grace of administrations that will always find a reason to say no.

Innovations don’t necessarily have to have a commercial effect. Many innovations do not bring any sort of profit, but they do increase the quality of life of citizens. These are social innovations. They bring new effective, efficient, equitable and sustainable solutions for well-known social problems. The value that is created in this way is more visible at the level of the macro-scale society than at the individual level, and therefore it does not make sense to measure the value of such innovation relative to their financial effects.

When the 2016-2020 Strategy for the Scientific and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia was undergoing public debate, one of the most painful issues for established and quite successful researchers were an orientation towards innovation. It appeared, at the very least, as though scientists were defending themselves from innovation as a monster that could destroy basic research which, according to many, is the intrinsic value of our science.

I am sure that the essence of this opposition was primarily in a misunderstanding of the term innovation. This is something for which we all need to have a lot of understanding. Nobody really expects scientists to become entrepreneurs and to figure out how to earn money, and then to deal with that. That is not their job. It is only important that they communicate with the rest of the world. Now science has to show why it is relevant to the society in which it develops.

Related Articles

Telemigration

Virtual Emigration Is An Ever-Greater Labour Market Challenge

No unequivocal answer exists to the question of whether or not it’s a good thing for the Serbian workforce that it’s increasingly gaining foreign...

Srđan Verbić Ph.D., Professor At Metropolitan University - FEFA, Former Education Minister

This Planet Has Many Who Are Cheaper Than Us

For whom telemigration will be a “win” and for whom it will be a “loss” depends on the national strategy. Entering the global market...

Branko Ružić, Serbian Minister of Education

We’re Awaited By Major Investments In Higher Education

The educational process fully adheres to the requirements set before it by the process of transforming Serbian society into a modern society with a...

Novak And Jelena Djokovic Participated In Workshops For Preschoolers

The founders of the Novak Djoković Foundation, Jelena and Novak Djokovic, visited the stand of the Ministry of Education at the Education Fair and...

Students From Serbia The Winners Of The Ecotrophelia Competition In Paris

The student team "Rooftop", from the Academy of Vocational Studies Belgrade from the department of the Higher School of Hotel Management, won the European...

European Commission: Serbia Advances Faster Than The EU Average In Innovation

The growth of the performance of the Republic of Serbia in the field of innovation is 15.6 percent in the period from 2015 to...

H.E. Lee Jung: Education A Priority In Cooperation Between Serbia And South Korea

First Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Serbia and Minister of Education, Science and Technological Development Branko Ružić spoke with HE Lee Jung,...

Unified Information System Of Education Launched

Prime Minister Ana Brnabic attended today the launch of the Open Data Portal, which contains data from the Unified Information System of Education (JISP),...