GE, Boeing, Oracle form coalition to
support Republican border tax
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[February 03, 2017]
By David Shepardson and Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. companies
including major exporters General Electric Co <GE.N> and Boeing Co
<BA.N> launched a coalition on Thursday to back a House Republican plan
to tax all imports, saying the proposal would "support American jobs and
American-made products."
The group, comprised of more than 25 U.S. companies and dubbed the
"American Made Coalition," also includes Dow Chemical Co <DOW.N>, Eli
Lilly and Co <LLY.N>, Pfizer Inc <PFE.N>, and Oracle Corp, the companies
confirmed.
The group's launch underscored a growing division in corporate America
over the House Republican proposal that would cut corporate income tax
to 20 percent from 35 percent, exclude export revenue from taxable
income and impose the 20 percent tax on imports.
President Donald Trump has sent mixed signals about border taxes and the
House proposal could face difficulties in the U.S. Senate where some
Republicans question whether it would unduly raise prices for U.S
consumers and businesses.
Companies that rely heavily on imports, such as retailers Target Corp
<TGT.N> and Best Buy Co Inc <BBY.N>, say a border tax would outweigh the
benefit of a lower headline corporate tax. Net exporters like Boeing and
companies that are purely domestic U.S. concerns say they would benefit.
"American workers and businesses are not competing today on a level
playing field with foreign competitors because of an outdated and unfair
tax system," said John Gentzel, a spokesman for the coalition. The
current tax system unfairly subsidizes imports of foreign goods, the
group said.
David Lewis, Lilly's vice president of finance and corporate tax, said
in a statement the group supports the House Republican blueprint.
Many of the companies in the coalition including Boeing and GE
successfully formed their own group in 2015 to save the Export-Import
Bank, a government-backed loan program that helps foreign buyers
purchase American exports.
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Boeing's logo is seen on its KC-46 Aerial refuelling operator's
station demonstrator during Japan Aerospace 2016 air show in Tokyo,
Japan, October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Meanwhile, the Retail Industry Leaders Association, which represents
more than 120 trade associations and companies, launched a separate
coalition on Wednesday to fight the House Republican proposal known
as the "border adjustment" tax.
The border adjustable tax is harmful, untested, and would put
American retail jobs at risk and force consumers to pay as much as
20 percent more for family essentials, said Sandy Kennedy,
president of the group.
Retailers, oil refiners and foreign automakers including Toyota
Motor Corp <7203.T> have been lobbying Congress, fearing that a big
tax on imports would hurt their sales and profits and put them at a
disadvantage to rivals more reliant on U.S.-made products.
Best Buy has circulated a flyer to lawmakers, which cites an analyst
forecast that a 20 percent tax would wipe out the company's
projected annual net income of $1 billion and turn it into a $2
billion loss, Reuters reported this week.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Ginger Gibson in Washington,
Editing by Soyoung Kim and Andrew Hay)
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