The tax dispute between PT EI and the Indonesian Tax Authority (DJP) centered on the correction of the VAT Base (DPP) for the utilization of Intangible Taxable Goods and/or Services from outside the Customs Area, based solely on cost equalization results. The Respondent made a positive correction of IDR 1.273.221.431,00 under the assumption that the balances in the "Accounts Payable Trade" and "I/C Advance" accounts represented payments for technical services and heavy equipment components from abroad that had not been subject to VAT, pursuant to Article 4(1) of the VAT Law and PMK-40/PMK.03/2010.
The core of the conflict lay in the differing classification of transactions and the validity of the equalization method used by the Respondent. The Respondent insisted that any cost discrepancy arising from the equalization of the Corporate Income Tax (CIT) Return with the Offshore VAT Base was automatically deemed a taxable VAT object. Conversely, the Petitioner provided a robust rebuttal, stating that the "Accounts Payable Trade" account was purely for the procurement of goods (spare parts) already subjected to Import VAT, while the "I/C Advance" account recorded expatriate salaries (subject to Article 21 Income Tax) and business travel expenses, neither of which are VATable objects under offshore service regulations.
In its legal considerations, the Board of Judges emphasized that the equalization method is merely an auditing tool, not an absolute legal basis for determining tax liability without factual evidence. Upon examining evidence such as stock cards, Purchase Orders, and payroll reports, the Board found that the corrected transactions did not meet the criteria for the utilization of services from outside the customs area. Payments for employee salaries and travel expenses—even for expatriates—constitute internal company expenditures that do not involve the delivery of Taxable Services by a third party.
This decision has significant implications: tax authorities cannot unilaterally use equalization discrepancies as a basis for correction if the Taxpayer can prove the economic substance of the accounts in question. PT EI's total victory (Full Grant) reaffirms the importance of accurate account classification in bookkeeping to withstand data-driven tax audits. In conclusion, a clear distinction between procurement costs, personnel costs, and foreign service fees is the primary key to mitigating Offshore VAT dispute risks.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here