The 2022 economy is like a 4-engine airplane with only one that works—and most experts want to turn it off, top economist says
Fortune · Andrew Harrer—Bloomberg/Getty Images

Federal Reserve officials have been playing hardball when it comes to inflation this year, arguing that the American economy is overheated and interest rate hikes are needed to achieve price stability.

But one top economist says the Fed’s policies are pushing the U.S. towards a potential disaster.

William Spriggs, an economist at Howard University, told Fortune that the Fed will drive the U.S. economy into a recession and throw millions out of work if it continues aggressively raising interest rates.

Spriggs criticized Fed officials, and his fellow economists, for failing to recognize the impact of unemployment on Americans, and particularly on communities of color that experience higher unemployment rates during recessions than the population overall.

He believes the Fed’s decision to emphasize one part of its dual mandate (price stability) over the other (maximum employment) is short-sighted given the encouraging signs that inflation may have peaked and the current macroeconomic challenges facing the world—from the European energy crisis to climate change-induced heat waves.

Spriggs' argument revolves around the idea that the U.S economy has four main economic engines—personal consumption, fiscal spending, investment, and global economic growth—and three of them are already out of gas.

“We're in an airplane, we've got four engines and three of them are off. And the Fed is saying the one remaining engine—personal consumption—is doing too much,” he said. “It's like, okay, but it's the only engine. And if I'm in the airplane, and you tell me we're down to one engine, and then you tell me we are going to turn it off. It’s like, ‘Wait, no.’”

Spriggs noted that global economic growth forecasts have fallen consistently over the past year, as both retail and institutional investors are pulling back, and fiscal spending is also trending down.

“Fiscal policy is already set to be contractionary. Even with the Republicans screaming and hollering about the Inflation Reduction Act, it still is negative fiscal policy. It brings in a lot more revenue than it spends. So, fiscal policy is all set to continue to slow down,” he said.

Spriggs went on to describe how raising rates during a growth slowdown is a recipe for economic disaster, and said that there is no self-correcting mechanism to help the economic engines of America restart after they’ve been shut off.

In his view, all of this means that it’s unlikely the U.S. economy will be able to secure the “soft landing” that Fed officials have been looking for.