In a groundbreaking development at the intersection of neuroscience and global economic policy, the Texas Brain Economy Summit held in Houston on June 9–10, 2026, marked the launch of a pioneering two-year global initiative focused on embedding brain health and cognitive capacity into the fabric of economic frameworks worldwide. This summit, which convened over 500 leaders spanning healthcare, academia, business, government, and investment sectors, has positioned brain capital as an essential resource for economic resilience and societal advancement.
Central to this initiative is the formation of the Brain Health for Economic Resilience Commission, organized in partnership with the prestigious scientific journal Nature Medicine. The commission is an unprecedented multinational effort, drawing together a diverse group of experts specializing in neuroscience, economics, public policy, global health, and workforce development. These leaders hail from institutions located across five continents, collectively tasked with constructing a scientifically rigorous foundation to quantify and optimize brain capital within economic systems.
The urgency of this initiative is underscored by staggering global economic losses attributed to brain disorders, which cost trillions annually and yet remain a poorly addressed element in strategic economic planning. Brain capital, as conceptualized by the commission, encompasses more than mere neurological health; it integrates the full spectrum of cognitive capabilities including adaptability, creativity, resilience, and social cooperation—traits that are crucial drivers of innovation and productivity within the modern knowledge economy.
Over the ensuing two years, the commission will embark on a multi-disciplinary synthesis of research findings and policy strategies, aiming to establish a comprehensive Brain Capital Index. This index aspires to operationalize a broad range of metrics, combining indicators of neurological health, cognitive skill sets, environmental influences, and socio-economic factors that collectively shape human potential and economic stability.
This novel index will provide governments, investors, and institutions with pragmatic tools for benchmarking progress, enabling data-driven decisions to strengthen brain health through targeted interventions. The capacity to measure and monitor brain capital will be transformative for public health, education systems, workforce development, and economic policy innovation, bridging traditionally siloed domains with a unifying framework.
The Nature Medicine commission will be supported administratively by a dedicated secretariat housed within the Global Brain Economy Initiative (GBEI), a collaborative enterprise led by Rice University in conjunction with partners such as the University of Texas Medical Branch, the Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative, the Euro-Mediterranean Economists Association, the European Brain Council, McKinsey Health Institute, and the Wyss Center for Bio and Neuroengineering. This coalition exemplifies the integrative and cross-sector vision necessary to tackle the complex challenges of sustaining cognitive capital on a global scale.
Rice University, a leading hub for brain science innovation, underpins this initiative with its strategic emphasis on health innovation and urban community development. The university, through its Rice Brain Institute established in 2025, integrates three interrelated pillars—Neuroscience, Neuroengineering, and Brain and Society. These pillars facilitate interdisciplinary research aimed at translating advances in brain science into practical outcomes affecting education, workforce readiness, technological innovation, and public policy. Co-chairs of the commission, Harris Eyre and Simon Fischer-Baum, play pivotal roles within Rice’s Brain and Society pillar, steering efforts to understand and enhance the social, cognitive, and affective dimensions of brain function.
Recent contributions to the global dialogue on brain economy highlight the need for cohesive investment in brain capital to unlock substantial economic growth, estimated at $6.2 trillion. A seminal report co-authored by Eyre, released earlier in 2026 by the World Economic Forum and McKinsey Health Institute, crystallizes this economic potential by framing brain health and cognitive skills as essential assets comparable to physical infrastructure or technological advancements.
The timing of this initiative is poignantly relevant amid demographic trends such as population aging, which elevates the prevalence of neurological and mental health conditions. Furthermore, the accelerating integration of artificial intelligence into diverse sectors necessitates a paradigm shift—recognizing cognitive capacities as critical levers for sustaining innovation, productivity, and societal well-being in the face of technological transformation.
Summit discourse underscored that Houston is uniquely positioned to spearhead this movement, possessing vital ingredients including clinical and academic expertise, robust industry leadership, and an ingrained culture of collaboration. This confluence creates an ideal ecosystem for advancing a holistic approach to brain health, resonating with broader efforts like Project Metis aimed at establishing the Houston-Galveston region as a global center for brain health innovation and economic development.
Amy Dittmar, Rice’s Howard R. Hughes Provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, emphasized the necessity of adopting a holistic view of brain health—one that integrates biological, psychological, social, and economic dimensions. This perspective aligns with paradigmatic shifts recognizing the brain as a dynamic socioeconomic resource central to human flourishing and sustainable development.
The summit’s diverse conversations captured the multifaceted challenges and opportunities inherent in operationalizing brain capital. This initiative, driven by scientific rigor and interdisciplinary collaboration, represents a vital step towards redefining how societies value and invest in human cognitive capacities, with implications that extend well beyond traditional health paradigms.
As this global commission moves forward, the creation of standardized measures and governance structures for brain capital promises to reshape policy frameworks and economic models. This effort has the potential to catalyze innovations in education systems, workforce development strategies, healthcare delivery, and public policy, forging a new era in which brain health is recognized as a cornerstone of economic and social resilience worldwide.
By translating cutting-edge neuroscience into practical economic tools and policy initiatives, the Brain Health for Economic Resilience Commission is charting an ambitious course to harness one of humanity’s most precious resources—the human brain—transforming it into a tangible driver of global prosperity and human potential.
Subject of Research: Integration of Brain Health and Cognitive Capacity into Global Economic and Policy Frameworks
Article Title: Launch of the Brain Health for Economic Resilience Commission at the Texas Brain Economy Summit
News Publication Date: June 24, 2026
Web References: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-026-04444-0, https://news.rice.edu/news/2026/rice-establishes-global-brain-economy-initiative-davos-aligned-new-report-brain-health
Image Credits: Rice University
Keywords: Brain health, brain capital, neuroscience, economic resilience, cognitive capacity, global health, public policy, workforce development, neuroeconomics, artificial intelligence, brain economy, brain disorders

