What's actually made in Serbia: the mechanics, not the mind
Strip the announcements down to their engineering and Serbia's robot project has a clear seam. The mechanical body — joints, chassis, motors, battery housings — is to be built in Serbian plants; the AI “brain” and algorithms come from China's AGIBOT. Where that seam sits decides how much of the value actually stays in the country.
The division of labour
- Made in Serbia: mechanical components and assembly, plus battery housings and some software, through Minth's operations in Loznica and Šabac.
- From China: the embodied-AI models and control software from AGIBOT.
- Jobs: the project is described as creating on the order of 8,000 positions across the wider high-tech push — a headline figure worth separating from the ~1,650 jobs tied to the specific signed investments.
Minth is not a newcomer: reporting puts its Serbian workforce at around 3,500 across facilities operating since 2018. That existing base is precisely why the mechanical side is credible — this is an established parts manufacturer extending into a new product, not a factory conjured from nothing.
The value-capture question
Assembling bodies while importing the intelligence is a normal way to enter a hardware industry — it is roughly how consumer electronics manufacturing began in much of Asia. The open question is whether Serbia moves up from bending metal toward the higher-margin parts — actuators, control electronics, and eventually the AI itself — or stays a mechanical subcontractor to a Chinese platform. The first is an industry; the second is a payroll.
Why it matters for buyers
For anyone sourcing hardware in the region, the split is practical, not academic: local mechanical production can shorten lead times and simplify service and spares, even when the software stack is foreign. Rojium flags where regional assembly genuinely changes availability — and where a “made in Serbia” label mostly means final assembly.
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