USA TODAY US Edition

Border tax has retailers on edge

Execs will air concerns with lawmakers today

- Roger Yu and Charisse Jones @ByRogerYu, @charissejo­nes USA TODAY

Several of the nation’s major retailers will meet with lawmakers Wednesday in hopes of thwarting a proposed import tax they fear will wipe out profits and potentiall­y lead to consumers paying more for items ranging from clothing to cars.

The House Ways and Means Committee confirmed its chairman, Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, will meet with retail executives about a GOP plan that would require U.S. companies to start paying taxes on what it costs them to import products from abroad. The group convening in Washington includes executives from AutoZone, Tractor Supply, Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft Stores, Target, Best Buy, GAP and JCPenney.

“Given that retail is the largest private sector American employer, retailers support sound policies that spur economic growth and job creation,” Brian Dodge, spokesman for the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, said in a statement. “Later this week, several top retail executives will visit Capitol Hill to meet with lawmakers and discuss pro-growth policies that will benefit both American con-

sumers and job creators.”

The border-adjustment tax, outlined in a plan co-authored by Brady and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., would potentiall­y lead to price hikes of up to 15% on products ranging from apparel to electronic­s, according to the National Retail Federation. Proponents say it will raise revenue that can be offset with lower corporate tax rates while spurring job creation in the U.S.

While the price increases likely would be particular­ly tough on lower- and middle-income consumers, industry watchers say they’d be necessary if retailers are going to eke out a profit in the face of increased costs.

The House proposal would require U.S. retailers that currently pay taxes only on the profit made from the sale of an imported product to also pay taxes on what it cost to purchase it from abroad. A retailer, for instance, that purchases a pair of jeans from Bangladesh for $10 and sells it in the U.S. for $30 currently pays taxes on just the $20 profit. But under the GOP House proposal, the store chain would have to pay taxes on the full $30.

The NRF has forecast that the tax change would likely lead to clothing and shoe prices spiking roughly 15%, while electronic­s would potentiall­y cost about 11% more.

David French, a senior vice president for the NRF, says the proposed tax would “drive up prices paid by American consumers, significan­tly impact the consumer spending that makes up two-thirds of our nation’s economy and threaten the tens of millions of jobs supported by the retail industry.”

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Best Buy is one of several major retailers meeting with lawmakers Wednesday.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Best Buy is one of several major retailers meeting with lawmakers Wednesday.

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