Jamie Dimon says Elon Musk’s DOGE ‘needs to be done’ — calls US government ‘inefficient’ and claims it’s more than just ‘waste and fraud.’ What he means and how to cut waste in your own life Billionaire Elon Musk — and his work at The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) — have drawn significant attention in recent weeks.
Anxieties were already running high inside JPMorgan Chase last month, days after top leadership announced that employees would soon be required to work in-office full-time, when an executive found himself responding to a question about another contentious issue at the bank.
The rollout of JPMorgan's RTO mandate has some tech employees are considering job offers or teaming up to influence work policy.
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24/7 Wall St. on MSNJamie Dimon says “Any good job is a good job” and it’s absolutely rightKey Points Jamie Dimon is the CEO of JPMorgan Chase. The billionaire bank leader said he believes any job is a good job and that there’s no such thing as a dead-end job. Dimon is right because every job you have helps you develop new skills that make
In many ways the nation’s largest lender is an outlier in continuing to support DEI, or the use of racial and “intersectional” (gender and genderidentity) preferences in hiring.
Harvard University has the most billionaire alumni, and with others like Stanford educating Larry Page and MIT teaching Sam Bankman-Fried.
It’s not just waste and fraud, it’s outcomes. Why are we spending the money on these things? Are we getting what we deserve? What should we change? I think doing that needs
Jamie Dimon, a fierce advocate of returning to the office, said he “completely respects” why some people need to work from home.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says that despite employee pushback, and a petition signed by over 1,800 staff at the time of writing, most of JPMorgan's 300,000 employees are still returning to the office full-time in March.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said he regrets his fiery rant but refused to budge on the bank's return-to-office policy.
We have become a highly bureaucratic, litigious, over-regulated society, and it’s bad,” said the JPMorgan Chase chief.
CEO Jamie Dimon on Monday expressed regret about the expletives he used during a recent employee town hall, but he didn’t back down from his core message that employees need to return to the workplace five days a week.
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