 Paul Zane Pilzer is a world-renowned economist,
a multimillionaire software entrepreneur, a part-time rabbi, a college professor
and the author of three best selling books.
Pilzer completed college in three years and
received his MBA from Wharton in fifteen months at age 22. At age 24, he was
appointed adjunct professor at New York University, where he taught for 20
consecutive years. While employed as Citibank’s youngest officer at 22 and its
youngest vice president at 25, Pilzer started several entrepreneurial businesses—earning
his first $1 million before age 26 and his first $10 million before age 30.
He was an appointed economic advisor in two
presidential administrations and warned of the impending $200-billion savings
and loan crisis years before official Washington was willing to listen—a story
that he later told in Other People’s Money (Simon & Schuster, 1989)
which was critically acclaimed by the New York Times and The Economist
magazine.
Pilzer’s Unlimited Wealth (Crown
Publishers, 1990) explained how we live in a world of unlimited physical
resources because of rapidly advancing technology. After reading Unlimited
Wealth, the late Sam Walton, founder of Wal-Mart, said that he was
"amazed at Pilzer’s business capacity" and his "ability to put
it into layman’s terms."
Pilzer’s God Wants You to Be Rich (Simon
& Schuster, 1995/1997) explained how the foundation of our economic system
is based on our Judeo-Christian heritage. This New York Times business
bestseller was featured on the front page of the Wall Street Journal and
on television shows ranging from 60 Minutes to First Person with Maria
Shriver. It has been published in 18 languages.
And now, in The Next Trillion, Pilzer
exposes our trillion-dollar food and medical industries and identifies a newly
emerging "wellness" industry that will soon occupy an additional
one-seventh, or "next trillion," of our economy—an industry in which
the fortunes of the new millennium will be created. |