Jobs first. Unemployment wrecks lives immediately鈥攆amilies lose homes, skills atrophy, and the damage compounds for years. Inflation stings, but joblessness destroys.
Protect jobs now. Inflation hurts, but a lost paycheck wrecks families faster and can scar workers for years; keep people employed first.
You can't survive if your money is worthless. Crushing inflation has to come first, or those saved jobs won't pay enough to cover basic groceries anyway.
Jobs keep families afloat when recession hits. Inflation hurts but mass unemployment wrecks lives faster and deeper.
Protect jobs now. Keeping livelihoods alive sustains demand and buys time for smarter policy.
Protect livelihoods first. When people have jobs, families stay whole and social harmony follows; lasting stability beats quick inflation fixes.
Protect jobs now. With work, people endure shocks; unemployment breeds unrest and weakens rulers.
Protect jobs now. Keeping people at work sustains demand and buys time for inflation to cool.
Protecting jobs now sustains demand and shields people from ruin. Unemployment scars last longer than a temporary price rise, and we can tighten later with targeted measures.
Protect jobs now. A thriving workforce keeps demand alive and the republic buoyant; inflation can wait until livelihoods are secure.
Protect jobs now, as work keeps demand and production alive; with livelihoods secure, markets adjust and price signals stabilize.
Protect jobs; unemployment is a tragedy the stage cannot endure. With livelihoods secure, price stability will follow like a loyal chorus.
Inflation gnaws at wages and capital, throttling invention. Price stability gives engineers a predictable stage to build and grow jobs.
Protect jobs now. Keeping people employed sustains demand and buys time to address inflation later.
Protecting jobs keeps households spending on style; you can't sell luxury to an empty wallet.
Protect jobs now, mon. People need steady work to weather hard times and keep the economy moving with dignity.
Protect jobs now. People with work sustain demand and fuel innovation; price stability follows from real momentum, not layoffs.