

Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase is thinking about a lot more than his bank's earnings these days.
Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase is thinking about a lot more than his bank's earnings these days.
One a pair of calls Friday — ostensibly to discuss the Wall Street firm's better than expected results — Dimon went off on the political gridlock in the US.
At one point, Dimon went so far as to say on a call with analysts that it was "almost an embarassment being an American citizen traveling around the world and listening to this stupid s--- we have to deal with."
He cited recent trips to India, China, Israel, Argentina and Ireland, saying those countries understood the importance of investing in education and infrastructure and getting tax policy right.
"It's amazing to me that every single one of these countries understands that practical policies that promote business and growth are good for the citizens of these countries for jobs and wages and that somehow, this great American free enterprise system, we no longer get it," he said.
He was pressed on the political situation in the US on several occasions, with one Wall Street analyst asking if clients were beginning to worry about dysfunction and a lack of progress in Washington D.C. Dimon flipped the question, saying that the US economy had grown despite years of bad policy, and that it would continue to grow regardless of the political climate. It could just grow faster.
Dimon taken the opportunity on a number of occasions in recent months to highlight problems in America, including its failing education system, stifling bureaucracy, and high levels of incarceration and opioid deaths. He has set out some solutions along the way.
These issues are much bigger than quarterly results, according to Dimon, and he urged journalists to see the bigger picture.
"Who cares about fixed income trading in the last two weeks in June," he said. "I mean seriously?"
Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase is thinking about a lot more than his bank's earnings these days. Read Full Story
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