The development of prospective inner and outer space economies focuses on the use of bunch of small space vehicles operated as a quasi-single artificial organism. Such economies include the need for using swarms of small satellites providing communication and surveillance services, being a distributed materials production plant in space, or performing research expedition to study the resources and environments of the new worlds. The use of multiple space vehicles performing tasks as a quasi-single system makes the execution of such missions resilient by reducing the failure risks that is higher for the single-vehicled mission, especially performed in deep space. The core technology for operating distributed space systems is propulsion. From a variety of propulsion technologies ranging from the use of the pressurized cold gas to the implementation of laser beams destroying the surface of solid propellants to generate thrust, some stands out for small spacecraft applications. In this work, the summary on the space-operated propulsion is provided by highlighting the impetus of more frequent use of one technology over other. The discussion on the trends in propulsion is supported by the discussion on the physical, engineering, production, operational, and societal rationales overview. This review serves as the mean for reevaluating of the global propulsion trends and guiding the future inner and outer space propulsion assisting economies effective development.