DIMON: 11 ways America is holding itself back

Follow Yahoo Finance’s full coverage of JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon’s annual letter to shareholders

In his annual letter, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon told shareholders that while America today is stronger than ever before, there are key factors holding us back.

“Our problems are significant, and they are not the singular purview of either political party,” Dimon wrote. “We need coherent, consistent, comprehensive and coordinated policies that help fix these problems.”

Dimon’s picture isn’t all dark. In fact, Dimon celebrates the US military, self-reliance on natural resources (food, water, energy), top universities and hospitals, reliable rule of law and low corruption, strong work ethic, entrepreneurial strength, and wide and transparent financial markets.

But he also cites major flaws in our system. He points to 11 self-inflicted problems for the economy:

1) Excessive regulation

“Everyone agrees we should have proper regulation — and of course regulations have many positive effects. But anyone in business understands the damaging effects of over-complicated and inefficient regulations,” Dimon wrote. Dimon explained that some estimate that $2 trillion is spent on regulations annually (roughly $15,000 per US household). And even if exaggerated, he said that sum highlights a disturbing problem, particularly because it also hinders small business creation.

2) High spending on wars

“Over the last 16 years, we have spent trillions of dollars on wars when we could have been investing that money productively,” Dimon wrote. While some of the money needed to be spent, he explained that every dollar spent on battle could be spent elsewhere.

3) Student loan growth

“Since 2010, when the government took over student lending, direct government lending to students has gone from approximately $200 billion to more than $900 billion,” he wrote. “We have little to show for it except dramatically increased student defaults and students who are rightfully angry about how much money they owe.”

4) High health care costs

Our nation’s health care costs are essentially twice as much per person versus most other developed nations.

5) High-skilled immigrants leaving US

Approximately 40% of those who receive advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering and math at American universities—300,000 students each year—are foreign nationals with no legal way of staying here even when many would choose to do so. “We are forcing great talent overseas by not allowing these young people to build their dreams here,” Dimon wrote.

6) Felony convictions high

Felony convictions for even minor offenses have led, in part, to millions of American citizens with criminal records, and this group often has a hard time getting a job, Dimon explained.