USA TODAY US Edition

Bank CEO: America needs tax reform now

Code is uncompetit­ive and loaded with provisions that unfairly create winners and losers

- Jamie Dimon

America is blessed with a combinatio­n of advantages that few other countries enjoy. We are the longest surviving democracy, with an entreprene­urial culture that fosters and rewards hard work and innovation. Our natural resources are abundant. We have the strongest military and a generally reliable rule of law and low corruption. Our country has some of the best universiti­es and hospitals and is home to many of the best, most vibrant businesses on the planet — from small and midsize companies to large, global multinatio­nals.

While we have been gifted with some of these benefits and earned others through hard work and determinat­ion, we know that U.S. exceptiona­lism requires vigilance. Specifical­ly, it means transcendi­ng our difference­s and seizing on opportunit­ies to further the remarkable success story of our country to provide greater prosperity for all Americans.

Today, President Trump will visit Missouri to speak about the opportunit­y to do just that by finally passing comprehens­ive progrowth tax reform.

PRO-GROWTH POLICIES

After traveling to Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America this year, I saw government­s that understood the importance of practical policies to promote businesses and economic growth because they benefit their people through greater job creation and wage growth. This month, I traveled to the Midwest and saw a different story, where businesses are being held back by an uncompetit­ive tax code.

Foreign government­s have figured out that sensible pro-growth polices have the power to create opportunit­y at all levels of the economy. As a country, we seem to have lost our way. As a businessma­n and a proud American, this frustrates and upsets me.

Reforming the tax code is the single most important thing that Congress could do to jump-start our economy, create jobs, and raise wages for American workers. Our current code is uncompetit­ive, overly complex and loaded with special interest provisions that unfairly create winners and losers. This drives down capital investment, reduces productivi­ty and causes wages to remain stagnant.

Individual­s and businesses waste billions of dollars and millions of hours each year trying to figure out their tax bills — instead of spending more time with their families, or thinking about how to innovate and expand.

Our corporate tax rate is the highest in the developed world. It has led to more American businesses being acquired by foreigners or struggling to keep pace with their foreign competitor­s. This means headquarte­r jobs are going to overseas cities instead of American cities. Our uncompetit­ive system has trapped more than $2.5 trillion overseas because American companies are penalized for bringing profits back by our high U.S. corporate tax rate.

PRO-WORKERS

This isn’t about helping companies like JPMorgan Chase. Yes, tax reform will help American companies become more competitiv­e, but the real reason to do it is to increase jobs and increase wages. Under our corporate tax system, workers bear up to 75% of the corporate tax burden through lower wages.

Tax reform should also be used to do more for lower- and middleinco­me workers by expanding programs such as the earned income tax credit, which already lifts more than 7.3 million workers out of poverty.

A recent survey of Business Roundtable CEOs found 90% believed that any delay in tax re- form would harm the economy by causing slower growth, hiring and investment.

The other side of that coin is that 76% of CEOs would increase hiring if Congress was successful in passing tax reform.

Tax reform isn’t easy, and there’s a reason it has been more than 30 years since it happened. The time has come for companies — and Congress — to set parochial and partisan interests aside to find a way to enact reform. If a proposal will result in greater economic growth, more jobs, higher wages and allow American businesses to be competitiv­e internatio­nally, it should be supported.

I’m as optimistic as ever on the future of America. It is encouragin­g that leaders in the White House, Senate and House have reached a common vision for moving forward with reform. I hope that vision becomes something that elected officials from both parties can support, but it is critical that we see progress now.

We have a limited window to get reform done, and this is an opportunit­y America can’t afford to miss.

Jamie Dimon, CEO and chairman of JPMorgan Chase & Co., is the chairman of the Business Roundtable.

 ?? GEOFF ROBINS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
GEOFF ROBINS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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