WASHINGTON – Target CEO Brian Cornell will argue Tuesday before a House committee against a tax change that would significantly increase the cost of imports for the Minneapolis-based retailer.
Target, one of the top sellers of imported goods in the United States, has been fighting the proposal since Republicans floated it late last year as a way of encouraging American businesses to bring foreign jobs home and create new ones in the United States.
If the tax is enacted, U.S. companies would in effect pay taxes on the full cost of imported items and not just on profits from sales of those items. The proposal, known as a border adjustment tax, aims to offset tax cuts elsewhere in a tax reform plan under consideration in the House.
Target, along with Richfield-based Best Buy and other retailers that sell a lot of foreign-made goods, has been aggressively lobbying against the change. Cornell has met with 30 lawmakers since December, and Target government affairs staffers have held more than 200 meetings with lawmakers on the issue, spokeswoman Dustee Jenkins said.
While the company supports tax reform, Jenkins said, "We are incredibly concerned about the impact of this particular legislation."
Cornell will appear Tuesday at a House Ways and Means Committee hearing titled "Increasing U.S. Competitiveness and Preventing American Jobs from Moving Overseas." Other speakers include the chief executive of Archer Daniels Midland, a big exporter that backs the plan, and former Wal-Mart CEO Bill Simon.
While Simon has expressed support for the border tax, Wal-Mart is part of a retail coalition that has been working against it.
Supporters of the proposal have argued that the value of the U.S. dollar would adjust to offset any tax effect on consumers. But retailers question that and say the likely effects of the proposal would be either higher prices for shoppers or lower profits.