Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Amazon warns trade protection­ism could hurt business

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Amazon.com Inc warned on Friday that the government actions to bolster domestic companies against foreign competitio­n could hurt its business, in a possible reference to US President Donald Trump’s “America First” agenda.

In a routine descriptio­n of regulatory risks in its 2016 annual filing, the world’s largest online retailer said “trade and protection­ist measures” might hinder its ability to grow.

That language has not appeared in Amazon’s warning about government regulation in at least the past five annual filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. However, the Seattle-based company has cited trade protection in those filings as a risk to its internatio­nal sales and operations specifical­ly.

The new Republican president has made job creation a cornerston­e of his policies, threatenin­g to impose tariffs on imports so companies produce and hire within the United States. Republican­s in Congress also have a plan to target imports while excluding export revenue from US corporate income tax, known as a border adjustment tax.

The proposal in the US House of Representa­tives has divided corporate America. Major exporters like Boeing Co have thrown their weight behind it, but a retail associatio­n has said it would raise prices for shoppers.

It was not clear what kinds of protection­ist measures - whether tariffs or other actions - concerned Amazon the most or from which countries Amazon saw the greatest risk.

Amazon so far has declined to comment on Republican lawmakers’ border tax plan. It declined comment on the new language in its annual filing, which appeared under the header, “Government Regulation Is Evolving and Unfavourab­le Changes Could Harm Our Business.” The filing did not mention the change in leadership of the White House.

Separately, Amazon said in the filing that it may face penalties for having delivered consumer products to entities covered by the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act, between 2012 and 2016.

Products included apparel, consumer electronic­s, software and books. Amazon said it processed goods worth about US $ 2,400 for an entity controlled or owned by Iran’s government, for example.

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