Transfer Pricing (TP) disputes in Indonesia often involve fundamental disagreements regarding the most appropriate methods and comparable data. The appeal case of PT MHP serves as a critical case study that underscores that, in domestic affiliated transactions, the burden of proof for the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) extends beyond merely finding the price. PT MHP, a company in the Industrial Timber Plantation sector, faced a Corporate Income Tax correction of USD13,004,942 because the selling price of timber to its domestic affiliate (PT TEL) was deemed non-arm's length.
The core conflict in this dispute lies in the validity of data comparability. The DGT argued that the Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) Method was the most appropriate because timber is a commodity. The DGT used internal data from compensation for investment/land-use-loan transactions with independent parties as comparables. The DGT assessed PT MHP's selling price to the affiliate to be below the median arm's length price and suspected a tax avoidance motive through low-price setting to utilize fiscal loss compensation. PT MHP, on the other hand, rejected the CUP. They argued that the forestry business has a complex value chain (planting, logging, processing), making the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM) with the Full Cost Mark-Up (FCMU) indicator the most suitable. Crucially, PT MHP deemed the compensation data used by the DGT to be substantially and functionally incomparable to a pure timber sales transaction.
The resolution of this dispute came from the Panel of Judges, which unequivocally revoked the entire TP correction. The Panel not only upheld PT MHP's arguments about the incomparability of the DGT's comparable data—given that the DGT failed to conduct the comparability analysis mandated by regulation—but the Panel also highlighted the DGT's procedural weaknesses. The Panel asserted that for domestic TP, the DGT failed to prove the existence of substantial tax avoidance risk. Furthermore, the DGT also failed to provide evidence of having performed a corresponding adjustment on the counterparty to the transaction, a vital obligation to prevent economic double taxation and ensure fiscal fairness.
The analysis of this decision indicates that the Taxpayer's victory rested on combining the proof of substance and procedure. The implication of this decision is significant: for Taxpayers in the commodity sector with a complex value chain, the decision validates profit-based approaches like TNMM and provides ammunition to reject non-pure price comparables. This case provides a valuable lesson for tax practice, reaffirming that the DGT must adhere to the principle of fiscal fairness, including the obligation to perform a Corresponding Adjustment, before imposing a TP correction. The Taxpayer's compliance in preparing an in-depth and defensive TP Documentation, especially the Functional Analysis (FAR) section, is key to mitigating the risk of disputes.
The comprehensive analysis and full judgment on this dispute are available here