In an era in which geopolitical competition is increasingly waged through economic instruments rather than military force, the ability to integrate economic policy into strategic statecraft has become a defining measure of national power. While trade, investment, energy policy, and financial leverage are now routinely deployed by rising powers to shape alliances, deter adversaries, and coerce competitors, the United States remains comparatively constrained—too often defaulting to traditional military tools while underutilizing its economic strengths. This imbalance reflects institutional fragmentation, outdated policy frameworks, and a persistent separation between economic and foreign policy thinking, even as global competitors adapt rapidly to a more integrated geoeconomic contest. Addressing this challenge requires a renewed vision of statecraft grounded in rigorous analysis and cross‑sector expertise. By drawing on the insights of leading economists, strategists, and technologists from across industries, and by leveraging private‑sector perspectives, such an approach can generate actionable policy ideas at the intersection of economics and geopolitics. The objective is to equip policymakers with concrete recommendations that strengthen America’s economic security, enhance its strategic position, and restore its capacity to compete effectively within an increasingly complex and contested global economic order.