WHO WE ARE
Our Objectives
1. Reimagine Capitalism for Humanity: To advance a new economic model grounded in African values of solidarity (Ubuntu), where markets serve people not the other way around.
2. Promote Economic Justice and Inclusion: To champion policies and programs that reduce inequality, ensure fair wealth distribution, and empower marginalized populations economically and socially.
3. Support Grassroots Movements: To build the capacity of grassroots and civil society organizations working to uplift vulnerable communities and hold economic systems accountable.
4. Foster Ethical Business Practices: To engage private sector actors in adopting responsible, sustainable, and inclusive business models that prioritize people and planet alongside profits.
5. Advocate for Systemic Reform: To influence national, continental, and global economic governance structures to embed equity, transparency, and accountability in development agendas.
6.Build Pan-African Solidarity: To foster cross-border collaborations that amplify African-led solutions to global economic challenges, rooted in shared values of dignity, reciprocity, and justice.
7.Amplify Voices of the Excluded: To ensure that the poor, women, youth, and indigenous communities have meaningful representation in shaping economic policies that affect their lives.

Ideological Background
Since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, free markets have swept the globe. Free-market economics has taken root in China, Southeast Asia, much of South America, Eastern Europe, and even the former Soviet Union. There are many things that free markets do extraordinarily well. When we look at countries with long histories under capitalist systems in Western Europe and North America we see evidence of great wealth. We also see remarkable technological innovation, scientific discovery, and educational and social progress. The emergence of modern capitalism three hundred years ago made possible material progress of a kind never before seen. Today, however almost a generation after the Soviet Union fell a sense of disillusionment is setting in.
To be sure, capitalism is thriving. Businesses continue to grow, global trade is booming, multinational corporations are spreading into markets in the developing world and the former Soviet bloc, and technological advancements continue to multiply. But not everyone is benefiting. Global income distribution tells the story: Ninety-four percent of world income goes to 40 percent of the people, while the other 60 percent must live on only 6 percent of world income. Half of the world lives on two dollars a day or less, while almost a billion people live on less than one dollar a day.
Poverty is not distributed evenly around the world; specific regions suffer its worst effects. In sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Latin America, hundreds of millions of poor people struggle for survival. Periodic disasters, such as the 2004 tsunami that devastated regions on the Indian Ocean, continue to kill hundreds of thousands of poor and vulnerable people. The divide between the global North and South between the world’s richest and the rest has widened.
What is wrong? In a world where the ideology of free enterprise has no real challenger, why have free markets failed so many people? As some nations march toward ever greater prosperity, why has so much of the world been left behind? The reason is simple. Unfettered markets in their current form are not meant to solve social problems and instead may actually exacerbate poverty, disease, pollution, corruption, crime, and inequality.
The idea of globalization is wonderful that free markets should expand beyond national borders, allowing trade among nations and a continuing flow of capital, and with governments wooing international companies by offering them business facilities, operating conveniences, and tax and regulatory advantages. Globalization, as a general business principle, can bring more benefits to the poor than any alternative. But without proper oversight and guidelines, globalization has the potential to be highly destructive.
Global trade is like a hundred-lane highway crisscrossing the world. If it is a free-for-all highway, with no stoplights, speed limits, size restrictions, or even lane markers, its surface will be taken over by the giant trucks from the world’s most powerful economies. Small vehicles a farmer’s pickup truck or Bangladesh’s bullock carts and human-powered rickshaws will be forced off the highway.
In order to have win-win globalization, we must have fair traffic laws, traffic signals, and traffic police. The rule of “the strongest takes all” must be replaced by rules that ensure that the poorest have a place on the highway. Otherwise, the global free market falls under the control of financial imperialism.
In the same way, local, regional, and national markets need reasonable rules and controls to protect the interests of the poor. Without such controls, the rich can easily bend conditions to their own benefit. The negative impact of unlimited single-track capitalism is visible every day in global corporations that locate factories in the world’s poorest countries, where cheap labor (including children) can be freely exploited to increase profits; in companies that pollute the air, water, and soil to save money on equipment and processes that protect the environment; in deceptive marketing and advertising campaigns that promote harmful or unnecessary products. Above all, we see it in entire sectors of the economy that ignore the poor, writing off half the world’s population. Instead, businesses in these sectors focus on selling luxury items to people who don’t need them, because that is where the biggest profits are.
The Heart of Our Work
Ubuntalism ‘I am because we are’ guides everything we do. From community paralegals to climate resilience cooperatives, we prove that economics rooted in solidarity can transform lives.
Who Makes It Happen
Board
Experienced advocates for economic justice.
Secretariat
Dedicated professionals driving change.