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Amazon would fare better than legacy retailers under a US import tax (AMZN)

Amazon Global Retail RevenueBI Intelligence

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US retailers have been pushing back against a recent congressional proposal that would enact a 20% tax on US imports.

Their concern is justified — the tax proposal would add an extra $ 15 billion to the total annual taxes paid by six major retail chains including Walmart, Home Depot, and Costco, according to RBC research cited by The Wall Street Journal. The implications for Amazon, however, are a bit more complex due to unique components of its business model. 

Amazon could still take a hit as the tax would likely decrease overall sales volumes and deter overseas marketplace sellers from selling to the US via the e-commerce giant.

However, Amazon — and other marketplace players — would not be hurt as much by the import tax as legacy retailers that sell direct to consumers. That’s because marketplace providers have different revenue sources than traditional retailers. Marketplace providers make the majority of their revenue through services they provide to merchants on their marketplaces.

Traditional retailers make their revenue via the sale of merchandise. Faced with a new tax on imports, traditional retailers would have to either raise prices on goods they import from other countries — likely depressing their sales — or accept a lower profit margin on goods they sell. Given that retailers already have razor-thin profit margins, the vast majority would be forced to raise prices.

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