“Slow growth and inflation have a tendency to accompany large deficits and increasing debt as a percentage of GDP.” GrowthDebtTendenciesInflationDeficitPercentagesAccompanyGdpSlow Growth Author:Bill Gross
“You don't actually find a strong correlation between- top-line GDP growth and making money in the market. It- it seems like you should. The fastest-growing countries should give you the highest return. They simply don't. But, there's only four of us- that- that believe that story. Everyone else in the world believes that if you grow fast like China, you'll outperform in the stock market.” IfsWorldGivingShouldBelieveCountryStoriesSeemsStrongGrowsGrowthLinesFourGrowingLike YouReturnHighestChinaMaking MoneyCorrelationGdp Author:Jeremy Grantham
“If your credit is going to grow at 10-15 percent per year in order to get your 5 percent GDP growth per year, eventually you're going to have a problem. This isn't a stable system.” IfsYearsProblemOrderGrowsGrowthPercentCreditStableGdp Author:Adair Turner, Baron Turner of Ecchinswell
“While our energy efficiency is improving, there is a very high correlation, almost near perfect correlation, between GDP growth, and energy usage.” EnergyGrowthPerfectEfficiencyImprovingUsageCorrelationGdpEnergy Efficiency Author:Malcolm Turnbull
“To put it in context, the federal government was, at the beginning [of the Vancouver meeting], talking about a $15-per-tonne floor for carbon emissions. We're at $30 a tonne, so we're already double that. But our economy is growing at a faster rate - three per cent of GDP is our projected growth in British Columbia.” GovernmentThreeGrowthTalkingEconomyGrowingMeetingsRateBritishFasterCentsCarbonFederal GovernmentEmissionsColumbiaGdpVancouverCarbon EmissionsBritish Columbia Author:Christy Clark
“Whatever it is, in a 1% GDP world, I think people feel like there are other things they have to do other than just organic growth.” PeopleThinkingWorldFeelsGrowthGdp Author:Ken Moelis
“Britain is a textbook case of how growing inequality leads to economic crisis. The years before the crash were marked by a sharp rise in remortgaging and the growth of 0% balance transfer credit cards. By 2008 the UK had the highest ratio of household debt to GDP of any major economy.” YearsGrowthCasesEconomyGrowingEconomicBalanceMajorsHighestPercentCrisisCreditDebtCardsInequalityBritainHouseholdCrashTransfersCredit CardTextbooksRatiosGdpEconomic Crisis Author:Frances O'Grady
“In a clean break from the Obama years, and frankly from the years before this president, we will keep federal spending at 20 percent of GDP, or less. That is enough. The choice is whether to put hard limits on economic growth, or hard limits on the size of government, and we choose to limit government.” YearsHardEnoughGovernmentChoicesGrowthPresidentBreakEconomicLimitsPercentCleanSizeSpendingEconomic GrowthGdpSize Of GovernmentFederal Spending Author:Paul Ryan