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I don't think that is largely always true. Inflation is a MUCH bigger threat compared to growth. We have had relatively flat growth for many years but has wage growth really followed that? Not really. It took an inflationary crisis to change this, people felt the inflation crisis but they never really feel the fact that we haven't grown fast for years.Come on now.
Growth isn’t simply about lines on a graph. It’s about the pounds in people’s pockets.
So if GDP falls on a per capita basis, it follows that the pounds in people’s pockets falls, and therefore living standards also fall.
Do you really think it’s daft to say that?
However, government has felt it and therefore people have felt it by the impact upon public spending. With the governments fiscal rules they can't spend more without borrowing more and the only way around that is to find savings or increase growth. Labour don't want to grow the country to put money into people's pockets.
Growth only directly threatens people in terms of job stability and unemployment but we still have one of the lowest unemployment rates in Europe so it isn't a huge issue. It is a huge issue though if you want a doctors appointment and we need to find money to fund more of them.