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Government of Serbia

Coordinates: 44°48′21.9″N 20°27′37″E / 44.806083°N 20.46028°E / 44.806083; 20.46028
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Government of the Republic of Serbia
Влада Републике Србије
Vlada Republike Srbije
Building of the Government of Serbia
Map
44°48′21.9″N 20°27′37″E / 44.806083°N 20.46028°E / 44.806083; 20.46028
Overview
Established29 June 2017; 7 years ago (2017-06-29)
(Current, 15th convocation of the Government of Serbia)
11 February 1991; 33 years ago (1991-02-11)
(1st convocation of the Government of Serbia)
StateRepublic of Serbia
LeaderPrime Minister (nominated by the President of the Republic)
Appointed byNational Assembly
Ministries18
Responsible toNational Assembly
Annual budget$153.91 million (2018, planned)[1]
HeadquartersNemanjina Street 11, Belgrade, Serbia
Websitewww.srbija.gov.rs

The Government of Serbia (Template:Lang-sr), formally the Government of the Republic of Serbia (Template:Lang-sr), commonly abbreviated to Serbian Government (Template:Lang-sr), is the executive branch of government in Serbia.

The affairs of government are decided by the Cabinet of Ministers, which is led by the Prime Minister.

Jurisdiction

According to the Constitution of Serbia, the Government:

  • Determines and guides policy
  • Executes laws and other general acts of the National Assembly
  • Adopts regulations and other general acts for the purpose of enforcing laws
  • Proposes to the National Assembly the laws and other general acts and gives an opinion on them when submitted by another proposer
  • Directs and coordinates the work of public administration bodies and supervises their work
  • Performs other duties determined by the Constitution and the law

Also, the Government is responsible to the National Assembly for the policy of the Republic of Serbia, for the implementation of laws and other general acts of the National Assembly and for the work of state administration bodies.

Incumbent government

The incumbent Cabinet was sworn on 29 June 2017 by a majority vote in the National Assembly. It is the first cabinet of Ana Brnabić, who became the Prime Minister month after the former Prime Minister of Serbia Aleksandar Vučić resigned from the office to become the President of Serbia, following the 2017 presidential elections. The current cabinet is in greater part similar to the second cabinet of Aleksandar Vučić and has 21 members (two more than previous cabinet), 18 with a ministry and 3 without portfolio.

List of ministers

Template:Government of Serbia

Government history

List of governments of the Republic of Serbia

Assumed office Prime Minister Party in Office
(leading)
Cabinet
11 February 1991 Dragutin Zelenović Socialist Party of Serbia Cabinet of Dragutin Zelenović
23 December 1992 Radoman Božović Cabinet of Radoman Božović
10 February 1993 Nikola Šainović Cabinet of Nikola Šainović
18 March 1994 Mirko Marjanović Cabinet of Mirko Marjanović I
24 March 1998 Mirko Marjanović Cabinet of Mirko Marjanović II
25 October 2000 Milomir Minić Cabinet of Milomir Minić
25 January 2001 Zoran Đinđić
Zoran Živković
Democratic Opposition of Serbia Cabinet of Zoran Đinđić
3 March 2004 Vojislav Koštunica Democratic Party of Serbia Cabinet of Vojislav Koštunica I
15 May 2007 Vojislav Koštunica Cabinet of Vojislav Koštunica II
7 July 2008 Mirko Cvetković Democratic Party Cabinet of Mirko Cvetković
27 July 2012 Ivica Dačić Serbian Progressive Party Cabinet of Ivica Dačić
27 April 2014 Aleksandar Vučić Cabinet of Aleksandar Vučić I
11 August 2016 Aleksandar Vučić Cabinet of Aleksandar Vučić II
29 June 2017 Ana Brnabić Cabinet of Ana Brnabić

Governmental agencies and offices

Government of the Republic of Serbia within its ministries has over 130 governmental agencies and institutions.[2][3] These are the services that operate within the Government of the Republic of Serbia (as of December 2017):[4][5]

  • Secretary-General Office of the Government of Serbia
  • Office for Cooperation with Media
  • Agency for human resources management
  • Airline service of the Government of Serbia
  • Directorate for joint affairs of republic authorities
  • Coordination Body for the municipalities of Preševo, Bujanovac and Medveđa
  • Office of the National Security and Protection of Classified Informations
  • Office for Cooperation with Civil Society
  • Audit Office of the European Union Asset Management System
  • Office for Human and Minority Rights
  • Office for Kosovo and Metohija
  • Office for Coordination Affairs in the Negotiation Process with the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government in Priština
  • The Office of the Council for Cooperation with the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
  • Office of Drugs Control
  • Public Investment Management Office
  • Office of Information Technology and Electronic Administration

See also

References

  1. ^ "ZAKON O BUDŽETU REPUBLIKE SRBIJE ZA 2018. GODINU". paragraf.rs (in Serbian). Službeni glasnik RS. Retrieved 14 January 2018.
  2. ^ "Srbija rekorder u broju agencija" (in Serbian). B92. 17 December 2011.
  3. ^ "Republičke agencije, zavodi i druge organizacije" (in Serbian).
  4. ^ "Година LXXIII – број 61". pravno-informacioni-sistem.rs (in Serbian). Službeni glasnik RS. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  5. ^ "ODLUKA O MAKSIMALNOM BROJU ZAPOSLENIH NA NEODREĐENO VREME U SISTEMU DRŽAVNIH ORGANA, SISTEMU JAVNIH SLUŽBI, SISTEMU AUTONOMNE POKRAJINE VOJVODINE I SISTEMU LOKALNE SAMOUPRAVE ZA 2017. GODINU". paragraf.rs (in Serbian). Službeni glasnik RS.