Value Added Tax (VAT) disputes regarding the Tax Base (DPP) of self-collected deliveries often arise from differing interpretations between tax authorities and taxpayers concerning the substance of a transaction. In the case of PT WKN (Decision Number PUT-003935.16/2023/PP/M.IVA Year 2025), the legal debate focused on whether plantation development costs advanced by a nucleus company constitute the delivery of Taxable Services (JKP) or merely a cost reimbursement. The Respondent (DGT) made a positive correction of IDR 1,018,988,400.00, arguing that the nucleus company provided facilities or conveniences to the cooperative/plasma farmers, meeting the criteria for service delivery as stipulated in Article 4 paragraph (1) letter c of the VAT Law.
The core of the conflict in this trial lay in the classification of labor, material, and transportation costs charged back to the plasma. The Respondent argued that since the Petitioner had credited Input VAT on these costs, Output VAT must automatically be collected when these costs are converted into plasma receivables. However, the Petitioner provided a strong rebuttal, stating that the scheme is a regulatory obligation under the Plantation Law to facilitate community plantation development. The Petitioner emphasized that no profit margin was taken (real cost) and the transaction was purely a bridging of funds for the plasma's benefit, which would later be repaid through harvest deductions.
The Board of Judges, in their legal consideration, favored the Petitioner's argument after conducting a thorough examination of accounting evidence. The Board found a crucial fact: the Petitioner never charged these expenditures as company expenses in the Profit and Loss Statement or Corporate Income Tax Return (SPT), but consistently recorded them as receivables in the balance sheet. This proves that the expenditures belonged to the plasma party and were only advanced by the Petitioner. The Board held that substantively, no delivery of Taxable Services occurred because no services were rendered by the Petitioner to the plasma; instead, it was the fulfillment of an obligation to facilitate plantation development where the real costs were borne by the plasma itself.
The implications of this decision provide legal certainty for the plantation industry regarding VAT treatment of nucleus-plasma schemes. This ruling confirms that as long as a transaction meets the criteria for pure reimbursement (no markup and not expensed by the advancing party), it is not a VAT object. In conclusion, the Board of Judges canceled the entire correction by the Respondent due to the absence of the "delivery" element in the plasma plantation development bridge loan transaction.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here