Energy is not simply a commodity. It is the political chemistry of continents, the financial pulse of industries, the invisible infrastructure of every economy, and the most consequential strategic fi
Intermodal Serbia: Where rail, road and river become economic strategy
There is a fundamental difference between a country with infrastructure and a country with a logistics system. One builds roads, rail lines, and ports; the other builds connectivity, efficiency and ec
Railway renaissance: Why Serbia’s cargo future is being decided now
There are moments in a country’s development when sectors previously taken for granted suddenly become central to its future. Railways are rarely glamorous. They do not carry the symbolic charge of me
Danube advantage: Serbia’s river route to trading power
Some countries are lucky to have coastlines; others are even luckier to have rivers that act like continents in motion. The Danube is not simply a river. It is one of Europe’s fundamental economic sys
Corridor X, corridor of opportunity: Why Serbia’s transport spine is becoming economic strategy
There are infrastructure projects that quietly improve transport, and there are infrastructure systems that redefine economies. Corridor X belongs to the second category. For decades it has been somet
Crossroads to advantage: How Serbia turns geography into economic power by 2030
There are countries that travel through history, and there are countries that history travels through. Serbia has always belonged to the second category. Empires, armies, trade caravans, industrial ro
From labour to capability: Serbia’s skills revolution imperative (2026–2030)
Every serious conversation about Serbia’s economic future eventually collapses into one unavoidable truth: everything depends on people. Not incentives, not infrastructure, not policies, not negotiati
National strength or borrowed growth? The strategic balance Serbia must get right (2026–2030)
Few countries in Europe have relied as successfully on foreign direct investment as Serbia. Over the last decade, foreign factories, foreign capital, foreign technology, foreign logistics giants and f
Knowledge as infrastructure: Why Serbia needs an industrial intelligence system (2026–2030)
Infrastructure is usually understood as concrete, rail, bridges, power plants and highways. But in modern economies, knowledge is infrastructure. Countries no longer compete only with ports and factor
From tools to technology systems: The rise of Serbia’s advanced machinery potential (2026–2030)
Machinery has always been the invisible backbone of industrial economies. Nations do not merely build products; they build the machines that make products possible. In that sense, advanced machinery m

