Auto Care Association says no to transition period for Border Adjustment Tax 

June 16, 2017
The Auto Care Association expressed its disappointment this week that U.S. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady, R-Texas, proposed a five-year transition plan for the Border Adjustment Tax (BAT) that is intended to subdue the BAT critics.

The Auto Care Association expressed its disappointment this week that U.S. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady, R-Texas, proposed a five-year transition plan for the Border Adjustment Tax (BAT) that is intended to subdue the BAT critics. The proposed tax on imports would significantly increase auto repair and maintenance costs for the average car owner in the United States.

The BAT, which would impose a new 20 percent tax on imported goods and services, would result in a $20 billion per year tax increase on automotive parts. 

“There is no tweaking, modification or transition period that will negate the harmful effects of the BAT tax,” said Bill Hanvey, president and CEO, Auto Care Association. “It is very concerning that Chairman Brady is ignoring the damage the BAT will do to American consumers and the automotive industry. No matter what he proposes, consumers will foot the bill and numerous family-owned businesses in the auto care industry will suffer catastrophic losses. The chairman should move on, leave the BAT behind and let real tax reform begin.”

The Auto Care Association is part of Americans for Affordable Products, a national coalition of 500 businesses and trade associations that are opposing the BAT. In addition to the higher auto repair costs it would create, the BAT is estimated to cost the average American family $1,700 per year in higher prices on everyday consumer items, such as gasoline, groceries, clothing, shoes and prescription medicines.

“This tax hike would burden middle class households who have seen their wages stagnate in recent years, while enabling profitable, multi-national corporations that already avoid paying their fair share of taxes to operate virtually tax-free,” said Hanvey.  
For more information, contact Paul Fiore at [email protected] or 301-654-6664.

Prep For The Future Today

Business Outlook Conference

Be a part of the inaugural Business Outlook Conference this July. For only $99, you will hear about the future of automotive and how it will affect your business from executives with IBM, AlixPartners, ETI, CCAR and much more!

REGISTER NOW

Sponsored Recommendations

Snap-on Training: ADAS Level 2 - Component Testing

The second video for Snap-on's comprehensive overview of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS), covering the fundamental concepts and functionalities essential for automotive...

Snap-on Training: Intro to ADAS

Snap-on's training video provides a comprehensive overview of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS), covering the fundamental concepts and functionalities essential for automotive...

Snap-on Training: Guided Component Tests Level 2

The second video for Snap-on's comprehensive overview of Guided Component Tests, covering the fundamental concepts essential for diagnostic procedures.

Snap-on Training: Data Bus Testing and Diagnosis Part 1

Learn the basics of vehicle data buses and their diagnosis with Snap-on's Jason Gabrenas.

Voice Your Opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Vehicle Service Pros, create an account today!