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According to
the New York
Times
Bestselling
Author,
World-renowned
Economist, a
Multimillionaire
software
Entrepreneur,
an adjunct
professor,
and the
author of
seven
best-selling
books and
dozens of
scholarly
publications
-- Paul Zane
Pilzer --
who is
openly
praised by
many
business
leaders
including
Sam Walton
(owner of
Wal-Mart) --
said the
following in
one of his
bestselling
books, 'The
Next
Millionaires':
"In
the
United
States,
household
wealth
tripled--growing
from
$13
trillion
in
1991
to
more
than
$40
trillion
in
2001.
Over
the
same
ten
years,
the
number
of
U.S.
millionaire
households
doubled,
jumping
from
3.6
million
in
1991
to
7.2
million
in
2001.
U.S.
household
wealth
rose
20
percent
to
$48
trillion--the
number
of
U.S.
millionaires
grew
from
7.2
million
in
2001
to
8.5
million
by
the
end
of
2004.
But
this
is
only
the
beginning.
Similar
to
where
we
were
in
1990,
the
U.S.
and
certain
parts
of
the
world
economy
in
2005
are
about
to
experience
the
greatest
economic
boom
in
our
history.
From
2006-2016,
U.S.
household
wealth
will
double
to
$100
trillion,
and
10
million
new
U.S.
households
will
become
The
Next
Millionaires--bringing
the
total
number
of
U.S.
millionaire
households
to
18.5
million.
This
has
enormous
implications
for
individuals
today
wanting
to
join
the
millionaire
population
explosion,
and
for
companies
and
professionals
wanting
to
market
to
this
new
elite
class
of
18.5
million
millionaire
households,
representing
about
40
million
people
in
the
U.S.
alone.
If
this
seems
impossible
consider
this:
I am
only
predicting
a
doubling
of
U.S.
household
wealth
to
$100
trillion
in
the
next
decade--it
tripled
in
the
1990s;
and
it
takes
only
$10
trillion
to
create
10
million
new
millionaires
from
scratch.
Perspective on wealth in America, given 100,000,000 Households:
- 7 million have a total net worth of $1 million or more, i.e., 1 in 14
- 3 million have investments of $1 million or more
- 1 million have a total net worth of $5 million or more
- ** Source: Extensive research by Dr. Danko - written in the book The Millionaire Next Door.
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"Who
will
those
new
millionaires
be?
Many
of
them
will
be
network
marketers
(home
based
business)."
"Ten
million
new
millionaires
will
be
created
between
2006-2016...
especially
if
you
are
in
direct
selling,
technology,
home-based
business,
product
distribution
or
an
emerging
industry."
(This
exact
direct
response
ad
is
for
a
home-based
business
that
have
these
(4)
factors
included
in
one
business
system).
To
get
some
perspective
on
where
the
most
accessible
fortunes
lie
in
the
new
economy,
let’s
look
back
at
two
historical
examples
of
surprising
new
industries—the
automobile
and
the
personal
computer—and
then
look
ahead
at
two
new
industries
that
are
just
now
on
the
rise:
direct
selling
or
direct
response
marketing
and
(personal
development)
wellness.

Right
now,
network
marketing
is
the
only
force
I
see
that
has
the
potential
to
effect
the
huge
change
that’s
so
badly
needed.
And
when
you
go
out
into
the
world
to
help
improve
people’s
personal
and
economic
wellness,
you
are
adding
value
to
society
and
contributing
to
the
betterment
of
the
world.
Now
let’s
go
back
to
that
forecast
of
$100
trillion
in
household
wealth
by
2016.
(And
remember,
that’s
a
conservative
forecast.)
Where
will
that
new
$52
trillion
come
from?
Of
course,
the
majority
of
it
will
go
to
make
those
people
who
are
already
wealthy
still
wealthier.
But
at
least
20
percent
of
it—$10
trillion
or
more—will
represent
new
entrepreneurs
coming
to
the
table.
That
$10
trillion
represents
ten
million
new
millionaires.
We
don’t
just
expect
to
live
more
years—we
expect
to
live
better
years.
This
same
shift
in
expectations
is a
strong
contributing
factor
in
network
marketing
as
well.
In
the
new
economy,
the
sheer
quantity
of
compensation
is
no
longer
enough.
People
today
also
demand
a
better
quality
of
compensation.
We
don’t
simply
want
money,
we
want
lifestyle.
Today’s
workers
understand
that
it
doesn’t
matter
how
much
money
you
earn
if
you
never
get
to
see
your
spouse
or
children,
or
if
you
sacrifice
your
health
for
your
work.
This
is a
demand
that
didn’t
exist
in
the
past.
During
the
Industrial
Age,
the
question
“Are
you
truly
happy
with
your
life?”
would
have
been
greeted
by
most
as
self-indulgent
nonsense.
“Happy?!
What
a
question!
I’m
making
money.”
Today
we
want
more.
Our
economy
and
living
standards
have
grown
to
the
point
where
we
not
only
expect
to
make
a
living,
but
also
expect
to
have
the
best
possible
experience
living
that
life.
We
don’t
want
to
have
to
sacrifice
family
for
work,
or
vice
versa.
Just
as
baby
boomers
want
to
be
younger
and
healthier,
they
also
want
to
have
the
economic
freedom
to
enjoy
their
continuing
state
of
health.
We
don’t
just
want
more
dollars;
we
want
better
dollars.
And
there
is
one
emerging
form
of
economic
enterprise
that
perfectly
fits
this
description:
network
marketing. | |