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If AI Brings an Age of Abundance, How Do We Get There?

A photorealistic near-orbital sunrise view of Earth, seen from a spacecraft with quiet traces of advanced infrastructure across the surface.

I. Core Conclusion

The “age of extreme abundance” will not arrive simply because AI models become more intelligent. It requires a whole set of new products, new infrastructure, and new organizational forms to reconfigure intelligence, energy, manufacturing, logistics, education, healthcare, finance, and governance into a social production system with lower costs, higher efficiency, and broader access.

If you want the product-side version of this argument, start with our guide to AI knowledge management. If you are evaluating concrete systems that turn capture into reusable context, our page on choosing a research workflow tool is the closest practical companion.

If summarized in one sentence:

The age of extreme abundance = near-unlimited intelligence supply × low-cost energy × automated production × highly efficient distribution × new social institutions.

What Elon Musk calls an AI-driven “age of abundance” is, in essence, a future powered by AI and robotics: the marginal cost of goods and services falls sharply, and humanity is no longer constrained for long by scarce labor, scarce knowledge, scarce manufacturing capacity, or scarce service capacity. In public remarks, Musk has described an optimistic scenario in which AI brings an abundance era where people can obtain “any goods and services” they want; he has also stressed that AI and robotics could be the path to “abundance for all,” while still carrying serious safety risks.

Historically, no industrial revolution changed the world through technology alone. Each one moved through three stages:

First, a breakthrough general-purpose technology appears.
Steam engines, electricity, internal combustion engines, semiconductors, the internet, and AI.

Second, the technology becomes productized, infrastructuralized, and industrialized.
Factories, railways, power grids, automobiles, telephones, computers, browsers, smartphones, cloud computing, and robots.

Third, the way society is organized changes.
Urbanization, the corporation, the assembly line, global supply chains, platform economies, remote collaboration, and the creator economy.

Therefore, the most important question in the AI era is not whether AGI will appear. It is:

Which AI-native products will become the machines, factories, automobiles, power grids, internet, and smartphones of the new era?

II. Historical Pattern: How Technological Revolutions Become Social Reality

1. The common path of industrial revolutions

Past technology revolutions have broadly followed the same curve:

Stage Core Change Representative Products Social Result
Scientific discovery / technological breakthrough New capability appears Steam engine, electricity, semiconductors, the internet, AI models Future possibilities are seen by a small minority
Tooling Technology becomes a usable tool Textile machines, generators, telephones, PCs, browsers, ChatGPT Efficiency improves in a limited set of industries
Infrastructure build-out Technology is deployed at scale Railways, power grids, highways, cloud computing, data centers The mode of social production is reorganized
Mass productization Ordinary people can use it Cars, home appliances, phones, apps, AI agents Lifestyles change
Institutional redesign New organizational forms appear The corporation, assembly lines, platform economies, remote work Economic structure changes

This shows that the future is not changed by “technical papers,” but by “scalable products.”

The steam engine itself was not the Industrial Revolution; steam-powered factories, railways, mines, and ships were. Electricity was not the Second Industrial Revolution; electric lights, motors, power grids, home appliances, telephones, and assembly lines were. The internet was not the information revolution; browsers, search engines, e-commerce, social networks, cloud computing, and mobile apps were.

Likewise, AI models themselves are not the age of extreme abundance. What the age of extreme abundance truly requires are:

AI workers, AI scientists, AI teachers, AI doctors, AI factories, AI farms, AI cities, AI energy systems, AI supply chains, AI public-service systems, and AI financial systems.

2. The essence of “abundance”: declining marginal cost

Abundance does not mean things appear out of thin air. It means the costs of production and distribution keep falling.

Every historical abundance era was, in essence, the result of some key cost being driven down:

Era Core Cost That Was Driven Down
Agricultural revolution The cost of food production
First Industrial Revolution The cost of physical labor
Second Industrial Revolution The cost of energy, transport, and large-scale manufacturing
Information revolution The cost of copying, distributing, and searching information
AI revolution The cost of cognitive labor, decision-making, creation, and coordination
Robotics revolution The cost of physical labor, service work, manufacturing, and care
Energy revolution The cost of electricity, heat, and materials processing

If AI only lowers the cost of writing copy, writing code, and making slide decks, it can bring only local efficiency gains. If AI goes on to lower the cost of research and development, manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, education, energy, construction, agriculture, and social governance, then a true age of extreme abundance becomes possible.

McKinsey estimates that generative AI could add $2.6 trillion to $4.4 trillion in economic value annually and could contribute 0.1 to 0.6 percentage points of annual labor-productivity growth through 2040. Goldman Sachs estimates that generative AI could raise global GDP by about 7% over ten years and increase productivity growth by roughly 1.5 percentage points.

These figures suggest that AI has enormous economic potential, but it is still far from “automatically creating extreme abundance.” It has to be embedded in real industries and turned into product systems that can run over time, be regulated, collaborate with humans, and deliver results.

III. The Underlying Formula of the Age of Extreme Abundance

This can be expressed with a simple formula:

The age of extreme abundance = intelligence abundance + energy abundance + material abundance + service abundance + time abundance + opportunity abundance.

Within that formula:

  1. Intelligence abundance: every person, every company, and every device can call on high-quality intelligence.
  2. Energy abundance: electricity, compute, and heat are cheap enough and stable enough.
  3. Material abundance: manufacturing, agriculture, construction, and logistics are highly automated.
  4. Service abundance: the marginal cost of education, healthcare, law, finance, companionship, and care declines.
  5. Time abundance: humans are released from repetitive labor.
  6. Opportunity abundance: individuals gain the ability to access education, create, start businesses, relocate, and collaborate.

The real difficulty is that AI tends to bring “intelligence abundance” first, while what society actually needs is “material abundance” and “service abundance.” Between intelligence and material reality lie the conversion layers: robotics, automated factories, energy systems, supply chains, and institutional design.

IV. From Historical Inference: What “Key Product Species” Will Emerge in the AI Era?

The following product lineages appear most important.

1. AI Agents: the future “personal computer + employee + operating system”

Assessment

AI agents are likely to become the first major interface of the AI era, much like the PC, the browser, and the smartphone in their respective eras.

But most agents today are still at the “chat + tool calling” stage. A truly mature agent would need to:

  • Understand long-term goals.
  • Break tasks into steps.
  • Use software and services.
  • Manage context and memory.
  • Handle transactions, communication, scheduling, and creation on behalf of users.
  • Be accountable for outcomes.
  • Be auditable and correctable.
Product types that are likely to appear

Personal AI concierge
Managing email, calendars, finances, learning, travel, health, shopping, and social relationships.

Work AI employees
Acting as market researchers, product managers, data analysts, code engineers, sales assistants, legal assistants, finance assistants, and HR assistants.

Enterprise Agent OS
Not a single-point SaaS tool, but an intelligent execution layer above enterprise systems, connected to CRM, ERP, BI, email, documents, tickets, databases, and code repositories.

Vertical industry agents
Doctor agents, lawyer agents, insurance-claims agents, trade agents, supply-chain agents, investment-research agents, customer-service agents, and real-estate agents.

Why does it matter?

The basic unit of the industrial era was “machine + worker.” The basic unit of the internet era was “software + user.” The basic unit of the AI era may become “agent + human goal.”

Many companies may shift from “hire many people + buy many software tools” to “a small number of human decision-makers + a large number of AI agents + automated workflows.”

2. Robotics: bringing intelligence from the digital world into the physical world

Assessment

Without robots, AI abundance remains mostly confined to information and content. With low-cost, highly reliable, general-purpose robots, AI can begin transforming the physical world of manufacturing, logistics, agriculture, care, construction, and household work.

Industrial robotics is already scaling. Data from the International Federation of Robotics shows that approximately 542,000 new industrial robots were installed in factories worldwide in 2024, more than double the level of ten years earlier; Asia accounted for 74% of new deployments in 2024. Sales of professional service robots approached 200,000 units in 2024, up 9% year over year.

Robotics is no longer science fiction. It is already spreading through manufacturing and services. The next key transition is from “special-purpose robots” to “general-purpose robots.”

Product types that are likely to appear

Factory robot fleets
Assembly, quality inspection, transport, packaging, and maintenance.

Logistics robot fleets
Warehouse AMRs, automated sorting, unmanned delivery vehicles, driverless trucks, and delivery drones.

Home robots
Cleaning, cooking, organizing, eldercare, childcare, and household repair.

Agricultural robots
Planting, weeding, harvesting, irrigation, pest monitoring, and greenhouse automation.

Construction robots
Automated bricklaying, spraying, 3D-printed buildings, site inspection, and dangerous-task substitution.

Medical and care robots
Rehabilitation training, ward inspection, eldercare companionship, medicine delivery, and surgical assistance.

Humanoid robot platforms
If general-purpose humanoid robots become cheap enough, they could become the “automobile” of the AI era: a mobile execution terminal for bringing intelligence into the real world.

Key inference

AI agents are “digital employees.” Robots are “physical employees.” Only the combination creates a true leap in productivity.

3. AI-native factories: from assembly lines to “self-evolving manufacturing systems”

Assessment

Future factories will not be merely automated; they will also be intelligent, self-optimizing, and flexible.

Traditional factories pursue economies of scale: the more of the same thing they produce, the cheaper it becomes. AI factories pursue intelligent flexibility: small batches, many categories, and rapid iteration can also become cheap.

Product types that are likely to appear

AI production scheduling systems
Adjusting production plans in real time based on orders, inventory, equipment status, and raw-material prices.

AI quality-inspection systems
Vision models, sensors, and predictive models that reduce the cost of manual inspection.

AI supply-chain brains
Demand prediction, dynamic procurement, inventory optimization, and logistics-route optimization.

Flexible manufacturing platforms
The equivalent of “cloud services for manufacturing,” where founders upload a design and the system automatically handles prototyping, quoting, production, and delivery.

Self-healing factories
Predictive maintenance before equipment fails, with robots automatically replacing parts.

Long-term significance

The age of extreme abundance requires large volumes of new physical goods: robots, sensors, energy equipment, medical equipment, housing modules, transportation tools, and agricultural equipment.

All of these require production systems that are cheaper, faster, and more automated. One of the most important future products may therefore not be a consumer app, but:

An AI-native manufacturing platform.

It may become core infrastructure for the next industrial revolution.

4. AI scientists and R&D platforms: accelerating invention itself

Assessment

In past industrial revolutions, technology diffusion was critical. The AI era adds something new: AI may not only apply technology, but also accelerate invention itself.

What may be truly scarce in the future is not application-layer ideas, but:

  • New materials
  • New drugs
  • New energy sources
  • New chips
  • New robot structures
  • New manufacturing processes
  • New agricultural varieties
  • New medical solutions
Product types that are likely to appear

AI laboratory operating systems
Managing literature, hypotheses, experiment design, data recording, and reproducibility.

Automated wet labs
AI designs experiments, robots execute them, and models analyze the results.

AI drug-discovery platforms
Target discovery, molecule generation, clinical-trial design, and real-world data analysis.

AI materials-discovery platforms
Battery materials, semiconductor materials, catalysts, lightweight materials, and construction materials.

AI engineering-simulation platforms
Automating structural design, fluid simulation, thermal simulation, electromagnetic simulation, and manufacturability optimization.

AI patent and technology-transfer platforms
Helping scientific discoveries become commercial products.

Core judgment

If AI only improves the efficiency of existing work, society may become richer. If AI significantly increases the speed of discovering new scientific and engineering solutions, society may move toward exponential abundance.

5. Energy products: the hard constraint of the age of extreme abundance

Assessment

No abundance era can be built on top of energy scarcity. AI, robots, automated manufacturing, autonomous driving, desalination, indoor agriculture, and data centers all depend on electricity.

The International Energy Agency projects that global data-center electricity demand will rise from about 460 TWh in 2024 to more than 1,000 TWh by 2030 and roughly 1,300 TWh by 2035; another executive-summary estimate states that data-center electricity use will more than double by 2030 to around 945 TWh, slightly above Japan’s total electricity consumption today.

This highlights a very practical constraint in the AI era: compute growth is ultimately constrained by energy, chips, cooling, the power grid, land, and capital expenditure.

Product types that are likely to appear

AI data-center energy-management systems
Dynamically scheduling training, inference, storage, cooling, and electricity pricing.

Distributed energy networks
Solar, storage, microgrids, and virtual power plants.

New nuclear-energy products
Small modular reactors, long-term fusion exploration, and nuclear-powered data centers.

Ultra-efficient energy storage products
Electrochemical storage, long-duration storage, thermal storage, and hydrogen storage.

AI grid-dispatch systems
Forecasting load, balancing renewable intermittency, and optimizing electricity markets.

Low-cost desalination and hydrogen-production systems
If energy becomes cheap enough, water, fuel, agriculture, and chemicals can all be restructured.

Key inference

One of the biggest bottlenecks of the AI era is not the model, but electricity.

Whoever drives down energy costs, compute costs, and robot operating costs controls one of the deepest leverage points in the age of extreme abundance.

6. AI education products: turning top-tier education into a basic service

Assessment

Education is one of the sectors most easily transformed by AI and one with the greatest long-term impact on social fairness.

An age of extreme abundance should mean not only material abundance, but universal access to high-quality learning opportunities.

Product types that are likely to appear

One-to-one AI teachers
Teaching in real time based on a student’s level, interests, pace, and error patterns.

AI learning-path planners
Working backward from goals into courses, exercises, projects, exams, and career paths.

AI practice systems
For language, mathematics, programming, writing, music, interviews, public speaking, and sales.

Skill-based simulation training products
Virtual training environments for doctors, pilots, engineers, lawyers, customer-service workers, sales teams, and managers.

AI companions for child development
Companionship, inspiration, learning management, and creative stimulation, but with strong safety boundaries.

Lifelong education platforms
Each person maintains a long-term learning profile, and AI continuously recommends and trains new capabilities as work changes.

Long-term significance

In the industrial era, education trained people for factories and companies. In the AI era, it will need to help humans move from “executors” toward “goal-setters, judges, creators, and collaborators.”

The core of future education products may not be knowledge transmission, but the development of:

  • Judgment
  • The ability to ask questions
  • Aesthetic sensibility
  • Systems thinking
  • Human-AI collaboration capability
  • Ethical awareness and responsibility

7. AI healthcare products: shifting from “treating illness” to “continuous health management”

Assessment

Healthcare is a classically scarce service: doctors are scarce, hospitals are scarce, diagnosis time is scarce, and drug development is expensive. AI can shift healthcare from passive treatment toward proactive prevention.

Product types that are likely to appear

Personal health agents
Integrating checkups, wearables, diet, sleep, exercise, medication, and family medical history.

AI screening and triage systems
Symptom intake, risk judgment, and department recommendations before formal care begins.

AI imaging-diagnosis assistants
Helping doctors identify anomalies in medical imaging and improving efficiency.

Chronic-disease management systems
Long-term management for diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, obesity, and sleep disorders.

At-home medical devices + AI interpretation
Portable ultrasound, blood-testing devices, ECG devices, and smart pill boxes.

AI drug-development platforms
Shortening the cycle of discovery and validation.

Eldercare robots
Companionship, fall detection, medication reminders, rehabilitation training, and basic care.

Long-term significance

True healthcare abundance does not mean everyone can book appointments faster. It means everyone has a continuously available health system that helps reduce illness, detect problems early, and treat them at lower cost.

8. AI agriculture and food systems: low-cost, stable, and safe food supply

Assessment

Food abundance is the bottom line beneath all abundance. AI and robotics will shift agriculture from experience-driven management to data-driven, automated, and precise systems.

Product types that are likely to appear

AI farm-management systems
Integrated decisions across weather, soil, water and fertilizer, pests, prices, and logistics.

Automated planting robots
Planting, weeding, spraying, harvesting, and sorting.

Indoor agriculture systems
Vertical farms, automated greenhouses, and urban farms.

Precision irrigation systems
Reducing water waste.

AI breeding platforms
Developing higher-yield, disease-resistant, and drought-tolerant varieties more quickly.

Alternative-protein production systems
Plant protein, fermentation protein, and cultivated meat.

Long-term significance

If energy, automation, AI breeding, and indoor agriculture combine, future food production may come to resemble industrial manufacturing: stable, predictable, low-waste, and less exposed to climate volatility.

9. AI construction and housing products: making housing cheaper, faster, and more personalized

Assessment

In many countries and cities, the core scarcity is not electronics but housing. If the age of extreme abundance cannot solve the cost of living space, it remains incomplete.

Product types that are likely to appear

AI building-design systems
Automatically generating plans based on budget, land, regulation, climate, and household structure.

Modular construction platforms
Building houses the way cars are manufactured.

Construction robots
Construction, inspection, maintenance, and dangerous-task substitution.

Urban digital-twin systems
Simulating traffic, energy, water, housing, commerce, and population change.

AI home-maintenance systems
Predicting leakage, electrical problems, structural issues, and energy-use problems.

Low-cost smart-home platforms
Allowing living spaces to adapt automatically to people’s daily habits.

Long-term significance

Future housing products may be less like static “houses” and more like living operating systems made up of energy, networks, sensors, robots, health systems, and learning systems.

10. Autonomous driving and new logistics: the circulation system of material abundance

Assessment

No matter how cheap goods become, real abundance cannot emerge if transport and distribution remain expensive. Logistics is the circulatory system of the material world.

Product types that are likely to appear

Autonomous taxis
Reducing the cost of urban transportation.

Driverless trucks
Reducing long-haul logistics costs.

Unmanned warehousing systems
Robotic picking, packing, and sorting.

Drone delivery
Suitable for medicine, emergency supplies, and high-value small parcels.

Urban logistics dispatch AI
Unified orchestration across express delivery, food delivery, supermarkets, cold chain, and instant delivery.

Global supply-chain intelligence networks
Forecasting changes in ports, shipping, geopolitical risk, inventory, and demand.

Long-term significance

Extreme abundance in the AI era is not only about producing more. It is also about delivering things more cheaply, more quickly, and more accurately to the people who need them.

11. AI finance and resource-allocation products: directing capital more efficiently toward innovation

Assessment

An abundance era needs not only productivity, but also more efficient resource allocation. The essence of finance is to convert future possibility into present-day resource investment.

Product types that are likely to appear

AI investment-research systems
Analyzing companies, industries, technology paths, risk, and valuation.

AI startup-financing platforms
Helping projects automatically generate business plans, financial models, fundraising materials, and investor matching.

AI risk-pricing systems
Insurance, credit, supply-chain finance, and trade finance.

Personal wealth agents
Budgeting, investing, tax planning, insurance, and retirement planning.

Public-finance simulation systems
Helping governments simulate how policy affects employment, inflation, industry, and income distribution.

Long-term significance

One key issue in the age of extreme abundance is how gains are distributed when AI greatly increases productivity. Finance products therefore need to evolve from “profit-maximization tools” into “allocation systems for long-term innovation and social stability.”

12. AI government and public-governance products: the operating system of a new social form

Assessment

The age of extreme abundance is not just a technical issue; it is also a governance issue.

AI will raise questions around employment transition, income distribution, privacy, safety, monopoly, national competition, educational restructuring, and social psychology. If governance systems remain low-frequency, paper-based, and departmentally fragmented in the industrial-era style, they will struggle to adapt.

Product types that are likely to appear

AI public-service assistants
Handling permits, taxes, social insurance, subsidies, and business registration.

Policy simulators
Modeling the impact of policies on different groups.

Urban operations brains
Traffic, electricity, drainage, emergency response, safety, and medical-resource dispatch.

Public-resource allocation systems
Precise matching across education, healthcare, housing, eldercare, and employment support.

AI audit and anti-corruption systems
Detecting abnormal transactions, budget waste, and procurement problems.

Public-participation platforms
Making policy easier for citizens to understand, respond to, and deliberate on.

Long-term significance

The AI era requires governance systems that are higher-frequency, more transparent, more explainable, and more responsive. Otherwise, the more powerful the technology becomes, the greater the risk of social fragmentation.

V. The Product Map of the Age of Extreme Abundance

Future products can be divided into six layers.

Layer 1: Intelligence infrastructure

Product Function
Foundation modelsProvide general intelligence
Multimodal modelsUnderstand text, images, audio, video, 3D, and sensors
Agent frameworksAllow AI to execute tasks
Memory systemsAllow AI to understand long-term context
Tool-calling systemsConnect software and real-world services
AI safety and alignment systemsControl risk
Model evaluation systemsAssess capability, reliability, and safety

Layer 2: Compute and energy infrastructure

Product Function
AI chipsReduce training and inference costs
Data centersProvide compute supply
Liquid cooling / next-generation thermal systemsSolve high-density compute heat problems
AI grid dispatchEnsure stable power supply
Energy storage systemsSmooth energy volatility
Nuclear / renewable energyExpand low-carbon electricity supply
Edge-compute devicesDeploy intelligence to phones, vehicles, robots, and factories

Layer 3: Digital productivity products

Product Function
AI office suitesDocuments, spreadsheets, email, and meetings
AI coding platformsAutomate software production
AI design toolsUI, industrial design, and architectural design
AI video and content toolsCreate content abundance
AI data-analysis toolsAutomate decision support
Enterprise Agent OSAutomate enterprise workflows
AI customer service / salesAutomate commercial service work

Layer 4: Physical automation products

Product Function
Industrial robotsAutomated manufacturing
Service robotsHealthcare, logistics, cleaning, and food service
Home robotsHousehold work and companionship
Agricultural robotsFood production
Construction robotsReduce housing costs
Autonomous drivingReduce transportation and logistics costs
Unmanned factoriesLarge-scale low-cost production

Layer 5: Social service products

Product Function
AI educationUniversal access to high-quality learning
AI healthcareUniversal access to health management
AI legal servicesUniversal access to legal services
AI financeUniversal access to wealth management, credit, and insurance
AI public administrationUniversal access to public services
AI eldercareRespond to population aging
AI emotional companionshipEmotional and relational support

Layer 6: New institutional products

Product Function
Digital identityRights, credit, and privacy management
Data-rights systemsDistribute data income across individuals and enterprises
AI dividend-distribution mechanismsHandle the gains from automation
Skills retraining systemsSupport workforce transition
Public compute platformsLower the barrier to innovation
Public AI servicesUniversalize education, healthcare, and public administration
AI regulatory sandboxesAllow innovation while controlling risk

VI. Final Judgment: The Most Important Future Products Will Not Be “AI Apps,” but “AI Productivity Infrastructure”

If history is any guide, the most valuable products are often not the earliest toy-like applications, but the things that later become infrastructure.

In the age of steam, the infrastructure was railways and factories.

In the electrical age, the infrastructure was the power grid, electric motors, and assembly lines.

In the automobile age, the infrastructure was roads, gas stations, and supply chains.

In the internet age, the infrastructure was browsers, search, cloud, payments, and social networks.

In the AI era, the infrastructure may be:

  • Personal agents
  • Enterprise Agent OS
  • Robot operating systems
  • AI factories
  • AI research platforms
  • AI energy systems
  • AI education systems
  • AI healthcare systems
  • AI city systems
  • AI resource-allocation systems

The age of extreme abundance is not a single-point product. It is a new civilizational technology stack.

VII. One-Line Summary

Extreme abundance in the AI era will not happen naturally just because models become stronger. It requires a generation of founders, engineers, scientists, and policymakers to re-productize, infrastructuralize, and universalize AI, robotics, energy, manufacturing, healthcare, education, agriculture, cities, and financial systems.

The most worthwhile directions to bet on are those that can turn a formerly scarce capability into a low-cost, replicable, scalable, universally accessible product.

In other words:

The greatest future products will not be the ones that let people generate a few more pieces of content, but the ones that give ordinary people capabilities that previously only large companies, the wealthy, experts, or state systems could possess.

That is the product judgment behind the age of extreme abundance.