Rejecting the "limits to growth" philosophy common to the 1970s, O'Neill points out that technological advances have historically created wealth for those societies with the foresight to develop them. He examines in detail six vast new markets that, if agggressively pursued, could sustain high levels of economic growth for the United States for many decades - microengineering, robotic reproduction, genetic hardware, magnetic flight, private aircraft flight and space manufacturing. Suggests that to conquer these markets long-term corporate growth and not short-term profits must be stressed, the adversarial relationship between labor and management must be superseded by cooperation, and venture capital investment must be encouraged.
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genetic engineering maglev train blah blah blah
O'Neill was interesting for particle physics and space technology
but i'm not sure he had a very good handle on being realistic at all with economics or technology application