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When analyzing any economic policy statement—whether it be the Annual Budget, Trade Policy, AI Policy, Employment Generation Policy, Monetary Policy, or any other economic directive—it is crucial to recognize that no policy can achieve inclusive economic growth through mere patchwork solutions addressing immediate problems. Without a strong foundation of social preparedness for the common good, such policies will inevitably fall short. If one seeks a true example of human prosperity, the present-day United States is not ideal. Instead, one should look to the Nordic countries, the U.S. of the 1960s, China’s rise in the 1980s, South Korea, or post-World War II Germany and Japan. History itself validates this trajectory of prosperity.

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