I am an economist before I am a politician.That order matters, because the choices Malta makes in the next five years will be decided not by slogans, but by whether the people in charge understand how an economy actually works.I am contesting the First and Eighth Districts, the localities I have lived in, worked in, and walked through, from Santa Venera and Ħamrun to Birkirkara, Iklin and Lija. This is the case I am making to my voters.Continuity is a strategy, not a sloganMalta did not arrive at full employment, record investment and one of the strongest fiscal positions in the Eurozone by accident.We got here through ten years of deliberate sequencing, institutional patience and disciplined execution.The numbers tell their own story: unemployment of 3.1% (among the lowest in the EU), an employment rate of 83.6% (the highest in the Mediterranean), +387% real-terms growth in ICT between 2015 and 2025, and an A− sovereign credit rating reaffirmed through every global shock since 2020.That is not an accident. It is the product of deliberate, sustained choices.Ambition is not the same as credibilityAt some point, ambition stops looking like vision and starts looking like fantasy.The question is not whether Malta should be ambitious. The question is whether we are being honest with ourselves about how transformation actually happens.For all its polished language, the opposition manifesto promises everything, everywhere, all at once. New schools every year, additional electricity interconnectors on top of the one under construction, a hydrogen-ready pipeline, a metro, a maritime fuel hub, sweeping renewable energy targets, with little sequencing, costing or institutional pathway.Many of the so-called “new” high-value sectors being promoted in opposition (financial services, gaming, aviation maintenance, AI integration, advanced manufacturing, renewable energy) did not suddenly appear in Malta because someone discovered them in opposition. They are already part of Malta’s ongoing transformation under the Labour Government.The challenge today is no longer identifying these sectors. The challenge is implementing them responsibly, competitively and sustainably within Malta’s specific economic and institutional realities.From growth to wellbeingMalta Vision 2050 was never an anti-development exercise.Its purpose is to guide Malta toward a more sustainable, resilient and wellbeing-oriented future, while preserving economic strength, competitiveness and social mobility.The clearest expression of that philosophy is the Wellbeing Index: measuring success not just through GDP growth but through health, environment, social inclusion, work-life balance, housing security and life satisfaction.That mirrors the international shift in advanced policymaking. It is also exactly the framework reflected throughout the Labour Party manifesto.Six things I will work on if re-elected in Maltese ParliamentEach priority is grounded in the Labour Party manifesto, but sharpened by what I hear from you.1. Wages that keep pace with the economy. Continued implementation of the cost-of-living mechanism, plus structural increases that reflect real productivity gains.2. Housing young families can plan around. First-time-buyer support, rental stability for working renters, and an honest conversation about supply in our inner-harbour localities.3. A Wellbeing Index that means something locally. Translating the national index into measurable district outcomes: air quality, green spaces, walkability, access to GPs and mental health.4. An economy that grows up, not just out. Continuing Malta’s shift from volume to value: ICT, fintech, med-tech, advanced manufacturing, AI integration, with training pipelines to match.5. Stronger and more resilient communities. Stronger funding for local councils, protected open spaces, and traffic and parking solutions that treat residents, not commuters, as the priority.6. Available, accountable, present. A regular constituency note: what came up at the door, what was raised in Parliament, and what changed because of it. You should be able to see the work.Serious national transformation isn’t loudThe Labour Party manifesto is the stronger national programme not because it is louder or more radical. It is stronger because it is more balanced, more credible, and more strategically coherent.It addresses families, pensions, healthcare, education, housing, mental health and digitalisation as interconnected dimensions of national wellbeing, not as isolated policy silos.Economic growth is not an end in itself. It only matters if it translates into stronger families, better services, cleaner communities, and a higher quality of life. That is the country I am asking you to vote for.Cressida Galea, PL MP and economist, is contesting Districts 1 and 8 on the 30th of May.Lovin Malta is open to interesting, compelling guest posts from third parties. 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