calender_icon.png 13 July, 2026 | 2:27 AM

EVERY ECONOMY BEGINS INSIDE THE HUMAN MIND

13-07-2026 12:00:00 AM

REASON BEFORE REACTION| Invisible chemistry shapes visible choices, mkts and civilisations; great economies begin with trust, compassion and wisdom

“Every individual is fighting an invisible battle. Every family carries silent burdens. Every business confronts uncertainty. Every government balances competing pressures. Every nation pursues security, prosperity and influence.” 

As markets reopen today (July 13), India begins another week carrying unanswered questions from the last one.  The monsoon remains uncertain. Investors continue weighing risk against opportunity. Employers hesitate before committing fresh capital.  Policymakers are still navigating American reciprocal tariffs, an unfinished India–US trade agreement and an increasingly fragile geopolitical landscape stretching from West Asia to global energy markets.  Confidence has not disappeared; it is simply waiting for clarity.

Yet beneath these familiar headlines lies a deeper question that economics alone cannot answer. Why do intelligent societies, blessed with unprecedented scientific knowledge, technological progress and accumulated wealth, continue to generate uncertainty, conflict and mistrust? The answer may begin within the human mind. Before every market rally or crash, every election victory or defeat, every diplomatic breakthrough or military confrontation, billions of human brains process hope, fear, ambition and expectation. 

Physics provides the electrical impulses that power the brain. Chemistry carries messages through molecules. Biology has refined these systems over millions of years to help humanity survive, compete and cooperate. Psychology transforms them into judgement and emotion. Economics becomes the sum of billions of individual decisions. Politics organises collective power. History records the consequences.

Scientists have identified several natural chemical messengers that quietly influence behaviour. Dopamine rewards achievement and fuels ambition. Cortisol prepares the body for uncertainty and danger. Testosterone strengthens confidence and competitiveness. Oxytocin nurtures trust and social bonds. None is inherently good or bad. Together they form part of the remarkable biology that makes us human.  

Yet hormones do not start wars. They do not crash markets. They do not topple governments. Those outcomes emerge when natural human instincts collide with poor judgement, misinformation, intolerance, weak institutions, unchecked ambition and the absence of ethical leadership. Markets reflect more than earnings; they reflect expectations. Governments depend upon more than policies; they depend upon trust. Nations prosper not by eliminating fear, but by governing it wisely.

The past week illustrated this reality. Tariff uncertainty delayed investment. Oil prices responded to conflict. Businesses postponed decisions while awaiting policy clarity.  Financial markets oscillated between optimism and caution. None of this was purely economic. It was the visible expression of millions of invisible human decisions interacting simultaneously. So who is to blame? Not physics. Not chemistry. Not biology.  Nature provides the impulses. Humanity chooses the response. 

Money is essential. Profit is legitimate. Enterprise creates employment, innovation and prosperity. But when disciplined investment gives way to reckless speculation, when long-term value is sacrificed for immediate gain, and when fear and greed overpower judgement, markets become fragile and societies pay the price.

Education refines judgement. Ethics restrains greed. Laws limit power. Independent institutions preserve confidence. Responsible leadership transforms uncertainty into stability. Compassion tempers ambition. These remain the true foundations of resilient economies and peaceful societies.

Perhaps the greatest investment India—and indeed the world—can make is not merely in infrastructure, artificial intelligence or military strength. It is in nurturing thoughtful citizens, trustworthy institutions and leaders who understand that lasting prosperity begins with understanding human nature itself.

Every civilisation is built twice. First in the human mind. Then in markets, governments and history. If humanity wishes to transform the second, it must first transform the first. Next Monday (July 20): Another week. Another lens. Another perspective.