Jamie Dimon Defends U.S. Capitalism, Criticizes Housing Policy and Downplays Institutional‑Investor Home Ban in CBS Interview
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon told CBS News that rejecting U.S. capitalism is “dead wrong,” while conceding the bottom third of earners have seen weak gains and blaming “bad policy” — including restrictive zoning and costly mortgage‑origination rules — for housing unaffordability and slower growth that he says costs roughly $20,000 in GDP per person for each lost percentage point. He called President Trump’s proposed ban on institutional buyers of single‑family homes “basically irrelevant” (only about 1% are owned by large firms) and said JPMorgan is exploring a prediction‑market‑like product but would not permit sports or political betting.
📌 Key Facts
- Jamie Dimon said rejecting U.S. capitalism is "dead wrong," while conceding the bottom third of earners have seen weak income gains and "struggle more."
- He blamed housing affordability partly on "bad policy" that kept U.S. growth around 2% instead of 3% over two decades, saying an extra 1 percentage point of growth would equal about $20,000 more GDP per person.
- Dimon identified local zoning rules and costly mortgage‑origination regulations as major barriers to affordable housing and said mortgage costs could be reduced.
- He dismissed President Trump’s proposed ban on institutional investors buying single‑family homes as "basically irrelevant," noting only about 1% of homes are owned by large companies.
- Dimon revealed JPMorgan Chase is exploring offering a prediction‑market‑like product but said the bank would not allow betting on sports or politics.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2023, the median household income for Black households was $56,490, compared to $84,630 for White households, representing a 33.3% gap; Black individuals make up about 12.4% of the US population, while White individuals make up about 61.6%.
Snapshots of Black and White Disparities — LendingTree
In 2023, the homeownership rate for White Americans was 74.3%, compared to 45.7% for Black Americans and 49.4% for Hispanic Americans; these disparities persist despite overall homeownership at around 65.3% in Q3 2025.
Homeownership rate by race U.S. 2023 — Statista
Black households in the middle income quintile possess less than one-third the wealth of White households in the same quintile, with education not fully closing the gap as Black college graduates have median wealth of $68,000 compared to $197,000 for White graduates.
U.S. Racial Wealth Gap Is Persistent And Growing, New Research Finds — Duke University News
In 2024, the poverty rate for Black Americans was 18.4%, higher than the overall rate, with 20.9% for Latino individuals and 18.5% for Black individuals in 2023 data.
Census Bureau Data Underscores Gender, Racial Disparities — CLASP
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"The WSJ opinion argues that while the Iran war can spike energy prices, a repeat of 1970s stagflation is avoidable if policymakers refrain from interventionist mistakes and the Fed acts promptly — a corrective perspective on warnings that the conflict will inevitably trigger a recession."
📰 Source Timeline (2)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Dimon calls critiques that U.S. capitalism no longer benefits most Americans 'dead wrong,' while conceding the bottom third of earners have seen weak income gains and 'struggle more.'
- He blames affordability problems partly on 'bad policy' that kept U.S. growth around 2% instead of 3% over two decades, claiming that extra 1 point of growth would equal about $20,000 more GDP per person.
- Dimon argues local zoning rules and costly mortgage‑origination regulations are major barriers to affordable housing and says mortgage costs could be reduced.
- He dismisses President Trump’s proposed ban on institutional investors buying single‑family homes as 'basically irrelevant,' noting only about 1% of homes are owned by large companies.
- Dimon reveals JPMorgan Chase is exploring offering some form of prediction‑market‑like product but says the bank would not allow betting on sports or politics.