23.1 C
Delhi
Saturday, November 15, 2025

Jamie Dimon Warns US Heading Toward European Economic Decline

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warns: America is going the way of Europe, we better start…

Key Takeaways

  • Jamie Dimon warns US faces European-style economic decline without policy changes
  • Anti-business policies driving companies from major cities will backfire
  • Florida and Texas cited as successful models attracting business from high-tax states
  • Dimon calls for elimination of “blue tape” regulations in Democrat-led cities

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has issued a stark warning that the United States risks following Europe’s path of economic decline unless it reverses anti-business policies that are driving companies out of major cities.

“In 30 years, if we don’t fix these things, we are going the way of Europe,” Dimon told the American Business Forum in Miami, pointing to Europe’s shrinking global GDP share as evidence of what happens when excessive regulation and taxation chase away businesses.

Dimon: Business-hostile policies will backfire

The Wall Street chief warned that jurisdictions adopting hostile business climates face severe consequences as companies relocate to more favorable environments. “Everyone has to compete—between countries, between states, and between cities,” he stated at the summit.

Dimon specifically highlighted Florida and Texas as states successfully attracting Wall Street firms away from high-tax cities like New York. He argued that “beating up business” to address issues like crime, education, or cost of living ultimately shrinks tax bases and harms the working-class people these policies claim to help.

“A lot of those cities do things in the name of good, which create bad,” Dimon said. “All of these bad policies, in my view, usually hurt the lower-paid people more.”

The ‘blue tape’ problem in Democrat-led cities

Dimon called on Democrat-controlled cities to eliminate what he termed “blue tape”—excessive regulations that stifle economic growth and innovation. His comments came as newly elected New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani prepares to implement progressive policies including higher taxes on the wealthy and expanded social programs.

“This notion of somehow being anti-business is going to help average American citizens, even the lower paid—I don’t agree with the concept,” Dimon stated.

Reaching across ideological divides

Despite their differences, Dimon reached out to Mayor-elect Mamdani, offering advisory support despite previously calling his policies “ideological mush” and labeling him “more Marxist than socialist.”

Dimon told CNN he left the 34-year-old democratic socialist a voicemail and suggested consulting Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, who revived his bankrupt city through business partnerships.

A JPMorgan spokesman clarified that Dimon “simply reiterated his long-held belief that government, business, community leaders and others need to collaborate on executing sensible policy.”

Latest

Judge Allows Elon Musk’s Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple, OpenAI

US federal judge rejects bid to dismiss Musk's lawsuit alleging Apple-OpenAI partnership creates AI monopoly, allowing case to proceed.

US Plans to Limit Green Cards Based on Country-Specific Factors

New Trump administration rule could make green cards harder for immigrants from travel-ban countries. Learn how country of origin may become a negative factor.

US Lawmaker Proposes Bill to End H-1B Visa Program

Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene introduces legislation to phase out H-1B visas, impacting Indian professionals who constitute 75% of visa holders.

White House Memo Claims Alibaba Aiding Chinese Military Against US

Declassified intelligence alleges Alibaba provided PLA with customer data, AI tools and software vulnerabilities, posing direct threat to US security.

Trump Removes Tariffs on Beef and Coffee to Lower Consumer Prices

President Trump eliminates tariffs on essential groceries including beef, coffee and tropical fruits amid rising consumer price concerns and political pressure.

Topics

IPO Market 2025: Mainboard Gains Halve as SME Listings Thrive

India's mainboard IPO returns plummet to 11.44% as expensive valuations dampen investor enthusiasm, while SME segment shows robust growth with 183 listings.

Kyvex: Indian Billionaire Launches AI Answer Engine to Rival ChatGPT

Pearl Kapur launches Kyvex, a free AI-powered answer engine developed in India to compete with ChatGPT and Perplexity for faster research and information discovery.

Saalumarada Thimmakka Passes Away: Tree Mother’s Legacy Lives On

India mourns environmental icon Saalumarada Thimmakka, who planted 384 banyan trees and blessed President Kovind during her Padma Shri ceremony.

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Buys $4.3 Billion Alphabet Stake

Berkshire Hathaway invests heavily in Google parent Alphabet while reducing Apple holdings as Warren Buffett prepares to step down after 60 years.

Apple CEO Succession: John Ternus Frontrunner as Tim Cook Nears Exit

Apple accelerates CEO succession plan with hardware chief John Ternus as top candidate to replace Tim Cook, who may step down as early as next year.

Free Aadhaar Biometric Update for Children 7-15: UIDAI 2025 Guide

UIDAI offers free biometric updates for children aged 7-15 from Oct 2025. Learn step-by-step process, fee waiver details, and why timely updates matter for Aadhaar services.

DPDP Rules 2025: India’s Digital Privacy Law Now Operational

India's first digital privacy law takes effect with DPDP Rules 2025, setting compliance deadlines for companies and strengthening data protection framework.

Judge Allows Elon Musk’s Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple, OpenAI

US federal judge rejects bid to dismiss Musk's lawsuit alleging Apple-OpenAI partnership creates AI monopoly, allowing case to proceed.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img