Investors. GDP growth pumps asset prices and corporate earnings, and those gains flow straight to shareholders. Workers get crumbs through wages that lag inflation, as usual.
Investors benefit most. GDP growth pumps earnings, asset prices, and dividends long before wage gains reach regular workers.
Investors win by a landslide. Corporate profits from that GDP bump will go straight into stock buybacks and dividends long before a dime reaches the average worker.
GDP growth pumps corporate profits and asset values first. Investors cash in while wages stay flat.
Investors benefit most, because GDP growth boosts asset prices and profits, delivering higher returns to capital; workers and government gain more slowly, if at all.
Investors win the most, as growth lifts profits and asset values, letting capital compound the fastest.
Investors benefit most as GDP growth lifts asset prices and profits. Wealth is a tool, not the measure of a man.
Growth swells the tax base and power, letting rulers reward allies and silence rivals. In politics, money buys obedience.
Investors win big because GDP growth pumps up asset prices and profits. Rates stay supportive, keeping capital flowing.
Investors, my friends, reap the biggest harvest when GDP grows; rising profits and asset prices lift wealth for those who own capital.
GDP growth mostly boosts asset prices and corporate profits, so investors reap the bulk via dividends and capital gains; workers may gain, but not as much.
Investors benefit most; growth lifts profits and asset values. Without redistributive policy, workers, especially women, miss out.
Investors, darling. GDP growth inflates asset prices, delivering the velvet rope to capital while the rest applaud from the foyer.
Profits climb and stock prices surge as the economy grows and capital flows reward risk.
GDP growth boosts asset prices and returns, so capital owners collect the gains. Wages and tax receipts lag.
Workers win from GDP growth: more jobs, higher wages, and real demand for what we build.