The Borneo Post

Retail CEOs head to Washington to try to kill US border tax

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WASH I NGT ON: Chie f executives of some of America’s largest retailers, including Target Corp and Best Buy Co Inc, are headed to Washington this week to make their case that a controvers­ial tax on imports would raise consumer prices and hurt their businesses, according to people familiar with the plan.

The group of eight retail bosses, that also includes chief executives of Gap Inc and Autozone Inc, will meet on Wednesday with Kevin Brady, chairman of the taxwriting House Ways and Means Committee, and with members of the Senate, four people said in recent days. Reuters could not confirm the full list of participan­ts.

This is the first time wellknown retail CEOs will descend on Washington as a group to try to make the case to kill the import tax proposal. Their input has more urgency as US President Donald Trump is finalizing his own tax plan that he plans to unveil in the coming weeks.

It is not known if the group, including Target CEO Brian Cornell, Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly, GAP CEO Art Peck and Autozone CEO William Rhodes, will meet with Trump at the White House while in town, according to people familiar with ongoing discussion­s.

Brady and Speaker Paul Ryan are leading a House Republican push that would cut corporate income tax to 20 per cent from 35 per cent, exclude export revenue from taxable income and impose a 20 per cent tax on imports.

Companies that rely heavily on imports, such as retailers, automakers and refiners say a border tax will outweigh the benefit of a lower headline corporate tax.

Asked for confirmati­on of the meeting, Brian Dodge, a spokesman for the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, told Reuters there was going to be a meeting this week but declined to provide further details.

The trade group is leading the industry’s effort to oppose House Republican­s’ proposal for a border adjustabil­ity tax, running a coalition of more than 120 companies and trade organizati­ons including WalMart Stores Inc and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.

Representa­tives for Target, Best Buy, Gap and AutoZone did not respond to requests for comment.

Trump has voiced some concern about the House tax proposal calling it ‘too complicate­d.’

But the White House also said previously that a border tax on goods from Mexico is one option under review to pay for a wall along the nation’s southern border.

The prospect of a big import tax is also pitting some of the largest US companies against one another. — Reuters

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