JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon is validating the growing frustration of working-class Americans, admitting in a recent interview that he completely understands why many have grown “anti-rich.”
The Wall Street billionaire argued that decades of ineffective public policies have left lower-income families behind in struggling rural areas and inner cities, forcing them to navigate failing schools and rising crime while wealthy elites remain insulated from those problems.
“The anti-rich thing has been around a long time, and I do understand it because I think, separate the two pieces, the piece that’s really important is that we have, in fact, left the lower-income folks behind,” Dimon told Axios. “And I remind people who are well off that they don’t worry about their schools. They don’t live in crime-ridden neighborhoods. So if you are making less income in your poor rural area or an inner-city area, your schools aren’t good. You go to crime-ridden neighborhoods – more divorce, less jobs, all the things that, yeah, it’s becoming de-generational. So let’s acknowledge it and fix it.”
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“All of us, Democrats, including unions, Republicans should say, ‘That shouldn’t happen that way.’ And the policies that created that were both Democrat and Republican. All of those policies did not work in the inner cities,” he continued.
“If you were the average citizen here and you say, ‘These wealthy people are getting unbelievably wealthy, and this segment has been left behind,’ that’s kind of annoying. Now, if we look at America in truth from the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s to 2020s, Americans have been doing much better, including the lower income.”
Data from the Federal Reserve’s Distributional Financial Accounts highlight a highly concentrated wealth distribution in the United States. The bottom 50% of households hold a combined $4.27 trillion of the nation’s roughly $174 trillion in household wealth.
In contrast, the top 0.1% of ultra-wealthy individuals command about $25.07 trillion, while those in the 99th through 99.9th percentiles own just under $30 trillion.
“I’ve been complaining a little bit about, I’ve just been speaking about, the fraying of the American Dream for years. And I think you have to acknowledge that there’s a flaw. And it’s more for the lower-paid individuals in America,” Dimon said.
“We asked our team… What more can JPMorgan do?” Dimon detailed the “Vital Institutions” initiative, which directs capital, banking and philanthropic support to organizations like hospitals, universities and local governments to boost low-to-moderate-income communities.
“Economic strength is somewhat predicated, affected – it’s life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and equal opportunity. So if you wanna have an equal opportunity country, you need to do some of these things to give people more opportunity,” he said.
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