Prepare for a growing backlash against artificial intelligence from politicians and white-collar workers – that’s the warning from Daleep Singh, chief global economist at PGIM Fixed Income.

We sat down with him at Abu Dhabi Finance Week, following a hectic weekend in the capital in which global music acts such as Metallica and Benson Boone drew huge crowds at their Formula One after-race concerts, while Wall Street heavyweights jockeyed with European banking leaders for pole position in the race for capital and deal flow.

β€œWe’re going to have a period of displacement from AI – and it’s white-collar jobs where the backlash will come,” Mr Singh said. "We'll enter a period of creative destruction, but we will be rewarded in the end with a productivity boom."

But before that arrives, he warned of a serious wave of what the Irish jokingly call β€œme fein” – all about me. β€œNo one does that better than politicians,” he said. He added that it will be an amalgam from the Republican and the Democratic side fuelled by white-collar anger and job losses – to slow or tighten AI adoption.

Mr Singh asked whether politicians, desperate to retain or win office in 2028, will continue to rubber stamp the regulatory hurdle removals the US tech giants demand to win the AI race?

On the macro outlook and global risks for 2026, he said the real problem was a β€œfailure of imagination, not a failure of memory”. Investors, he said, should think beyond the headlines to understand tail risks.

Think Russian President Vladimir Putin invading a near-Nato country in a challenge to the alliance’s Article 5.

Market collapse risk

He also warned of the risk of a market collapse, pointing to the current β€œscramble for assets”.

The rush, Mr Singh said, reminds him of 2006, when there was race for assets and securitisation. He sees parallels in parts of the crypto space: could we see another FTX-style collapse? More worrying, he added, is that some of these newer assets are β€œnow filtering into the banking system”.

With it being Fed week, a report card on the US economy was key. Mr Singh argued that the risk is not recession but overheating – driven by a dovish Federal Reserve, easy monetary policy, loose fiscal policy, tariff risks, a tightening labour market and surging AI CapEx.

All of these levers will drive a solid growth of about 1.8 per cent – but with the danger of inflation pushing back above 3 per cent, Mr Singh said.

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