Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said that by commissioning the new information system e-Inspector, Serbia has received today completely electronic and transparent inspection supervision, the only one of its kind in Europe.
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Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said that by commissioning the new information system e-Inspector, Serbia has received today completely electronic and transparent inspection supervision, the only one of its kind in Europe.
At the 26th session of the Coordination Commission for Inspection Supervision, Brnabic stated that 36 inspection service offices joined e-Inspector today, and that the remaining seven will join by the end of the year.
The Prime Minister pointed out that Serbia thus shows that it can be the only one in Europe and that it can be the leader when energy, time and money are invested, and when the state stands behind a project entirely.
She pointed out that the inspections are one of the pillars of the fight against the gray economy, for the achievement of fair competition on the market, the fight against corruption and the strengthening of the economy, especially the SME sector and entrepreneurship, which we need for a faster growth.
Minister of Public Administration and Local Self-Government Branko Ruzic emphasised that e-Inspector will greatly change the status of inspectors and the nature of the inspection supervision.
The procedure will be much more transparent and without duplication, as well as more efficient and cheaper for the economy as it will be without paperwork, Ruzic explained, stating that only one document on the inspection performed costs about €15.
He stressed that big benefits will be achieved for the budget and businessmen, and added that today the Office for Information Technology and E-Government will deliver new laptops to all inspectors who passed the training so that they could get familiar with e-Inspector.
Director of the Office for Information Technology and E-Government Mihailo Jovanovic told reporters on the eve of the above-mentioned session that this office worked on the implementation of this very complex electronic information system for the past year and a half.
Jovanovic said that as of tomorrow, 1,500 inspectors will go to work on the ground using a laptop, a mobile internet and a qualified electronic certificate.