TIME

HOW AMERICA LOSES ITS EDGE

MIT’s Vannevar Bush, circa 1935, with an early analog computer

For the past 50 years, the rational exuberance of the American economy has been propelled by the combination of three innovations: the computer, the microchip and the Internet. The research and development that produced each came from a triangular alliance of government, academia and private business.

This tripartite machine of government working with universities and private corporations was not merely a random array with each group pursuing its own aims. Instead, during and after World War II, the three groups had been purposely fused into an innovation triangle.

The person most responsible for forging this assemblage was Vannevar Bush, an MIT professor who

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