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DIMON ON UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS: 'Let them stay and let them build companies'

JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon speaks at a Remain in the EU campaign event attended  at JP Morgan's corporate centre in Bournemouth, southern Britain, June 3, 2016. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon speaks at a Remain in the EU campaign event attended at JP Morgan's corporate centre in Bournemouth, southern Britain, June 3, 2016. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

(JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon.Thomson Reuters)

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon wants to see immigration reform in America.

Speaking with CNBC's Wilfred Frost on Monday, the chief executive highlighted several policy areas that he believes need to be addressed, including infrastructure spending and income inequality.

He also pointed to the 2013 bipartisan "Gang of 8" immigration bill that he said provided a proper pathway to legalizing undocumented immigrants as an example of what was needed.

"Most of them have jobs, most of them are doing fine," Dimon said of undocumented immigrants.

He added that "kids" come from around the world to get advanced degrees at top universities, and then, "We send them home."

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"Let them stay and let them build companies," he said, noting that three of his own grandparents were born overseas.

Dimon is touring the US to meet bank employees, and is currently in California. He said that many of the staff he has been meeting in the region are the children of immigrants.

"Almost all of their parents were all born overseas, and they're fabulous Americans," he said.

He cited the example of an employee who moved from China, bringing her parents with her.

"She's among our top personal bankers in a retail branch," he said. "If you saw her, you'd be amazed at what this country still offers to people in terms of opportunity."

The CEO has become increasingly vocal about economic and political issues facing the US and the world.

Last month, he raised the minimum pay for 18,000 of his employees. He came out hard against the UK's decision in June to leave the EU, and in the company's annual letter released in April, he described multiple challenges, including infrastructure and long-term fiscal and tax issues, that he said must be dealt with.

"We have serious issues that we need to address — even the United States does not have a divine right to success," he wrote at the time.

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