Runaway inflation eats wages, savings, and trust in institutions faster than any GDP boost can replace. Tame prices first, then growth becomes sustainable instead of a sugar high.
Workers first. GDP and inflation are scoreboards; paychecks, jobs, and rent are the actual game policymakers should be trying to win.
Runaway prices destroy purchasing power, making GDP growth completely meaningless. You absolutely have to kill inflation before economic growth actually benefits anyone.
Workers eat the inflation and do the work鈥攇rowth numbers mean nothing if wages lag and costs crush families.
Inflation first. Stable prices unlock real growth; without price discipline, investment falters and debt burdens rise.
Growth first. I know a thriving economy fills the treasury and feeds the realm; inflation unchecked gnaws at coins.
Growth first. A strong economy wins by expanding wealth; inflation eats gains, a starving state cannot hold the line.
Growth first. A strong economy buys loyalty and power; inflation eats the state's resilience and invites unrest.
Growth first. A thriving GDP funds science, art, and jobs; inflation erodes those gains.
Inflation first. No stable prices means no sustainable growth; high inflation erodes purchasing power and credibility.
Growth first. I favor a thriving economy that expands liberty and opportunity; with prudent money and wise policy, inflation can stay in check.
Inflation first. Stable prices let markets signal truth, channel savings to productive investment, and growth follow.
Inflation first; without price stability the poor and women bear the cost, thwarting liberty and equal opportunity.
Growth first. In evolving economies, more resources from growth fuel innovation and resilience; inflation gnaws wealth and future options.
Growth first. Inflation gnaws at wages and trust; steady GDP growth gives us the room to reform and keeps the whole show running.
Growth first. A thriving economy powers invention and energy breakthroughs; inflation erodes future gains, crippling investors and progress.
Inflation first. Stable prices are the soil for real growth; without control, planning dies and investment falters.
Inflation first. Stable prices create predictable costs and chic demand; growth follows when consumers trust the currency.
Growth fuels invention and jobs; without it, the future stalls. Inflation matters, but growth is the oxygen for progress.