Tax compliance for the forestry industry often encounters specific accounting complexities, particularly in reconciling timber production volume with the recognition of Value Added Tax (VAT) Output income. This case involving PT. SRL in a December 2017 VAT dispute highlights how the Taxpayer successfully defeated a Tax Base (DPP) correction of IDR 56,095,416,748, which was based on the tax authority's assumptions. The core of this dispute lies in the differing interpretations of the remaining volume of timber harvested, for which Forest Resources Provision (PSDH) had been paid, as documented in the Online Forest Product Administration Information System (SIPUHH) Production Report (LHP).
The conflict arose when the Tax Authority (Terbanding) used the total LHP timber volume (148,619.29 m3) as the basis for the taxable supply (sale) subject to VAT. The Tax Authority assumed that since PSDH had been settled for this volume and the Taxpayer’s Audited Financial Statements did not list the inventory in a conventional account, the entire volume must have been sold. This view was based on Article 4 paragraph (1) of the VAT Law.
However, the Taxpayer (PT. SRL) strongly rebutted this by presenting accounting evidence supported by specific forestry industry standards. The Taxpayer successfully demonstrated that the volume difference, representing unsold timber, was recorded as an investment cost in the Developing Industrial Timber Forest (HTIDP) account, in line with the Financial Reporting Guidelines for Production Forest Utilization (DOLAPKEU-PHP) and the practices of PSAS No. 32 on Forestry Accounting. This recording indicated that the timber was still inventory whose sales had not yet been realized.
The Tax Court Judges decided to reject the Tax Authority’s correction on this item. The main legal consideration of the Panel was that an assumption based solely on SIPUHH LHP volume data is insufficient to prove a taxable supply (sale) subject to VAT. The Panel found that the Taxpayer had successfully met the burden of proof by presenting detailed inventory movements and audited financial statements, which logically and consistently explained the existence and classification of the remaining timber volume.
The implication of this decision is crucial for the forestry sector: it affirms that forestry production volume data (LHP) is not the sole and absolute proof of VAT-liable sales. The tax authority's obligation to prove the existence of a VAT supply must be supported by evidence of cash flow, receivables, or Tax Invoices. For Taxpayers, this decision underscores the importance of robust accounting documentation and comprehensive reconciliation between forestry production data and tax reporting.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here