Trade & Investment
Trade and investment liberalisation are considered to be important instruments of development policy, and indeed a fair and open trade system is one of the Millennium Development Goals. However, governments are still pursuing traditional policies of liberalisation, partly because of the strong influence of the business community.
SOMO wants to raise the political debate about the impact of trade and investment agreements on poverty and other social aspects, going beyond the traditional discourse on the macroeconomic impact of trade and investment liberalisation. SOMO links the negotiations and rules on international trade and investment with the actual conduct of corporations within these rules and agreements. This provides the basis for SOMO and her partners to engage in developing - within existing civil society networks - alternative trade and investment policies that contribute to poverty eradication, higher social and labour standards, and sustainable development.
Trade & Investment News
New SOMO report on ING highlights corporate social responsibility issues
“Liberalisation limits regulation that stabilises financial markets”
Just EU Investment Policy now!
Business as usual
The impact of free trade on the financial crisis … and vice versa












