ZAGREB, March 1, 2019 – The head of Zagreb University, Damir Boras, said on Thursday that Croatian universities were not so bad considering how little was invested in them.
His comment came in response to the statement by Science and Education Minister Blaženka Divjak that the present system at the Croatian universities and scientific institutes stifled excellence and needed reforming.
Boras and Divjak attended a ceremony at which an agreement granting Croatia associate membership of the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) was signed.
Addressing the ceremony, Divjak spoke of the situation in the Croatian science sector, saying that Croatia ranked 25th among the 28 EU member states in terms of obtaining funding for Horizon 2020 projects and at the bottom in terms of obtaining funding for projects funded by the European Research Council. She said that the present system at the universities and scientific institutes stifled excellence and needed reforming.
Asked by the press after the ceremony to comment on the minister’s statement, Boras said that “Croatian universities are not so bad considering how little is invested in them.”
“Zagreb University is the best and largest scientific institution in Croatia with by far the largest output, despite poor funding. We can’t be expected to be the best in the world if we are at the bottom in Europe in terms of financing,” Boras said, urging the minister to secure more funding for science and higher education.
“All relevant indicators show that Zagreb University is at the tail end of Europe in terms of financing, but is not at the tail end of Europe in terms of relative output. If we look at the amount of money invested, then we are actually very good,” Boras concluded.
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