U.S. President
Donald Trump will welcome the chief executive officers of Target Corp
(TGT.N),
Best Buy Co Inc (BBY.N)
and six other major retailers to the White House on Wednesday morning to
discuss tax reform and infrastructure.
Best Buy and
Target have been fighting a proposal to impose a border tax on imported goods,
among sweeping changes presented by the Republican-controlled House of
Representatives. Convincing Trump to oppose the measure would probably bring an
end to it.
Trump plans to
announce his own tax plan in the coming weeks.
The meeting
will include Target's Brian Cornell, Best Buy's Hubert Joly, Gap Inc's (GPS.N)
Art Peck, Autozone Inc's (AZO.N)
William Rhodes, Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc's (WBA.O)
Stefano Pessina, J.C. Penney Co Inc's (JCP.N)
Marvin Ellison, Jo-Ann Stores' Jill Soltau and Tractor Supply Co's (TSCO.O)
Gregory Sandfort.
The group will
also meet on Wednesday with the heads of the two tax-writing congressional
committees, Kevin Brady, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, and
Senator Orrin Hatch, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.
Brady and
House Speaker Paul Ryan are leading the push to overhaul the tax code by
cutting the corporate income tax to 20 percent from 35 percent, imposing a 20
percent tax on imports and excluding export revenue from taxable income.
Companies that
rely heavily on imports, such as retailers, automakers and refiners, say a
border tax would outweigh the benefit of a lower headline corporate tax.
Trump has
voiced some concern about the House tax proposal, calling it "too
complicated." But the White House also has said a border tax on goods from
Mexico is one option under review to pay for a wall along the nation's southern
border.
The prospect
of a big import tax is also pitting some of the largest U.S. companies against
one another. A group of major exporters, including Boeing Co (BA.N), General
Electric Co (GE.N) and Pfizer Inc (PFE.N), have formed their own coalition to
support the import tax.
*REUTERS*

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