This Corporate Income Tax dispute case study of PT BTCI for Fiscal Year 2017 highlights the failure to prove transaction substance as the basis for a transfer pricing adjustment. The Tax Court Judicial Panel rejected PT BTCI's entire appeal regarding a Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) adjustment of IDR 46.04 billion, related to intra-group service fees from its affiliate, BT Plc.
The dispute centered on a fiscal adjustment for service costs deemed non-compliant with the Arm's Length Principle (ALP). PT BTCI strongly argued that as a limited risk service provider, it heavily relies on its parent company's global infrastructure and know-how. PT BTCI claimed to have submitted comprehensive evidence, including Local and Master Transfer Pricing Documentation (TPD), a Global Service Agreement (GSA), invoices, and timesheets. A benchmarking analysis using TNMM, showing an NCPM of 5.69% (above the arm's length range), was presented as primary evidence that the transaction was at arm's length.
DGT did not dispute the benchmarking analysis itself but focused its adjustment on a more fundamental aspect: the failure to prove the existence of the service. DGT deemed the supporting evidence provided to be extremely weak. Invoices were considered non-detailed, while crucial supporting documents like email correspondence were proven irrelevant (originating from 2012-2013 for a 2017 dispute). Because PT BTCI failed to prove the services actually occurred, DGT applied Article 3 paragraph (3) of PMK-213/2016, which stipulates that the Taxpayer is deemed not to have applied the ALP.
The Judicial Panel, in its considerations, fully supported the DGT's position. The Panel affirmed the hierarchy of proof in intra-group service disputes: the existence test and benefit test must be met before proceeding to the arm’s length price test (TPD). The Panel even analyzed the GSA and found fatal flaws; the service description (Article 3.3) was deemed more akin to shareholder activity, and PT BTCI was found to have violated its own contractual clause in Article 8.10 requiring a "written request" for each service. The TPD and arm’s length benchmarking evidence were dismissed as mere bookkeeping records, not real proof of service execution.
This decision has significant implications, confirming that possessing a TPD that appears arm’s lenght (in terms of profitability) does not absolve the Taxpayer of the obligation to provide contemporary, detailed, and relevant supporting evidence for the existence of every service expensed. Failure on the existence test provides a strong legal basis for the tax authority to adjust the entire affiliate service cost, overriding the Taxpayer's benchmarking analysis results.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here