The Serbian Minister of Finance, Siniša Mali, responded to claims made by Dejan Šoškic, a former central bank governor and professor at the Faculty of Economics, regarding Serbia's macroeconomic policy. Šoškic criticized the current economic strategy, arguing that Serbia has fallen behind comparable countries and suggesting devaluation of the currency to improve competitiveness. Mali refuted these claims, pointing out that during Šoškic's tenure as governor (2008–2012), Serbia faced high inflation, a weakened dinar, exploding public debt, recession, and high unemployment. He highlighted significant improvements since then, including GDP growth from €33 billion to nearly €100 billion, increased average wages, reduced unemployment, improved credit ratings, and lower public debt as a percentage of GDP. Mali also challenged Šoškic’s assertion that foreign direct investment did not contribute to export growth, noting a more than 315% increase in exports between 2012 and 2025.
Bias read (Center): The article presents a direct exchange between two officials—Minister of Finance Siniša Mali and former central bank governor Dejan Šoškic—discussing economic policy. The framing is neutral, presenting both perspectives without overtly favoring one side. The language remains factual, focusing on the


