WASHINGTON – The chief executives of Target Corp. and Best Buy joined a half-dozen other retail executives Wednesday to express "grave concerns" to President Donald Trump about a proposed tax that the retail industry says will increase costs to consumers, according to a source familiar with the closed-door meeting.
The border adjustment tax, part of a larger House Republican tax reform plan, aims to discourage companies from buying or manufacturing products outside the United States. The border adjustment forces companies to pay taxes on the full purchase price of imported items and not just on profits from those sales.
In a statement Wednesday, Target said the tax "will raise prices for American families on everyday essentials. If enacted, ...[it] would have profound implications for our guests and business."
As they came and went, Target's Brian Cornell and Best Buy's Hubert Joly were both tight-lipped about their visits to the White House and Capitol Hill.
Neither man responded to reporters' questions on the way into the West Wing meeting with Trump. Cornell came to a very brief post-meeting press appearance but did not speak. Joly did not attend the press gathering.
In a lighthearted aside, a video taken as the CEOs introduced themselves showed Trump pausing after Cornell introduced himself from Target.
"Tar-zhay, right?" the president said with a smile.
Still, the business that brought the retail leaders to Washington was serious.