Disputes involving transfer pricing and Value-Added Tax (VAT) on intra-group services are often a nightmare for multinational companies in Indonesia. Tax authorities frequently apply rigid physical proof standards—such as demanding flight tickets or accommodation receipts—to acknowledge the existence of a service. However, this Tax Court Decision provides a breath of fresh air and sets an important precedent. In the case involving PT ASCI, the Panel of Judges decisively overturned the VAT corrections made by the Directorate General of Taxes (DJP), affirming that the existence of shared services need not always be proven by physical presence but rather through substantial evidence of business benefits.
This dispute originated from a 2016 tax audit, where the DJP made two significant corrections against PT ASCI. First, a correction to the VAT Tax Base (DPP) amounting to IDR 97,524,806.00. This correction was based on a classic audit technique: equalization. The auditor found a discrepancy between the turnover in the Corporate Income Tax Return and the VAT reports, immediately assuming the difference was sales on which VAT had not been collected. Second, a correction of Input VAT amounting to IDR 75,838,814.00 on management fee payments to affiliates in Singapore and China. The DJP rejected the crediting of this Import VAT on Services because PT ASCI was deemed unable to prove the "existence" of the services. The DJP's reasoning was purely procedural: there were no attendance records, flight tickets, or accommodation proofs for foreign experts in Indonesia.
In court, PT ASCI mounted a comprehensive defense. Regarding the equalization issue, they proved the DJP's correction basis was flawed. In a parallel dispute for the Corporate Income Tax of the same year, the Tax Court had already annulled the turnover correction. PT ASCI argued that if the "parent" correction (Corporate Tax) had fallen, the VAT correction, which was merely a mathematical derivative, must also be cancelled.
On the management services issue, PT ASCI challenged the DJP's "physical evidence" logic. They explained their highly efficient business model: employing only 7 staff members, all focused on sales (commercial). Who, then, handled IT, Legal, HR, and Finance? The answer was Shared Services from affiliates. PT ASCI presented evidence in the form of work emails, timesheets, reports, and invoices to prove the services were genuinely rendered and provided crucial benefits. Without these services, the company's operations would be paralyzed.
The Panel of Judges took a progressive stance favoring substance. On equalization, the Judges agreed to apply the principles of consistency. Since the turnover correction in the Corporate Income Tax had been annulled, the VAT Tax Base correction automatically lost its valid footing.
Most interestingly, regarding the management services, the Judges rejected the DJP's argument demanding physical travel evidence for services that could be performed remotely. The Judges stated that based on the examination of documentary evidence (contracts, emails, deliverables), the services were proven to exist and provide efficiency benefits. The Judges emphasized that the absence of flight tickets did not negate the fact that services were rendered. Thus, the VAT paid on these services was valid for crediting.
This decision carries vital strategic implications. First, Taxpayers must ensure synchronization of defenses between Corporate Tax and VAT disputes, as a victory in one tax type can be the key to winning in another. Second, for intra-group services, documentation is king. Even if physical travel evidence is absent (due to remote work), Taxpayers must be able to present strong alternative evidence such as email correspondence, detailed timesheets, and a benefit test analysis rationalizing why the service is needed. This decision serves as a reminder that in modern tax litigation, a logical business model explanation is often stronger than merely satisfying rigid administrative requirements.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here