The application of the Arm's Length Principle to intra-group services in Transfer Pricing (TP) disputes has an undeniable consequential impact on a Taxpayer's right to claim Input Tax Credit (VAT/PPN Masukan) on Services Utilized from Outside the Customs Area (PPN JLN). The case of PT ELI serves as a critical study, highlighting how the correction of service expenses in the Corporate Income Tax (CIT) realm leads to the correction of Input Value-Added Tax (VAT), with the total disputed Input VAT reaching IDR 924,459,918.00. The dispute centers on a fundamental question: did the services received by PT ELI from affiliated parties—including IT services and business support—truly provide a legitimate economic benefit, or were they merely shareholder activities that should be recharacterized as a disguised dividend?
The core conflict stems from the Directorate General of Taxes (DJP) rejecting the benefit and existence of several intra-group services acquired by PT ELI from EMGSC, EMPC, and EMAPPL, based on the findings of the CIT audit. The DJP argued that payments for services whose existence or benefit could not be proven, or were found to be duplicative, were essentially a disguised distribution of profits (disguised dividend). Consequently, the transaction was deemed a non-VAT object, rendering the PPN JLN previously paid by PT ELI as not subject to VAT, and therefore, the credited Input VAT was considered not directly related to the business activities, contravening Article 9 paragraph (8) letter b of the VAT Law (UU PPN). PT ELI, conversely, maintained that the services were legitimate, vital for operations, and that all PPN JLN obligations had been met, making the paid PPN JLN Input Tax legitimately creditable.
The resolution to this conflict was determined by the Panel of Judges, who meticulously segregated the services by referencing the related CIT court decision. The Panel acknowledged the services from EMGSC and EMPC as Low Value-adding intra-group services that provided a proven economic benefit. Thus, the correction of the PPN JLN Input Tax related to these services could not be sustained. However, the advisory services from EMAPPL were categorized as shareholder activities recharacterized as a disguised dividend. Accordingly, the PPN JLN on the EMAPPL transaction was deemed not due. To maintain the integrity of the VAT system, and in line with Article 13 paragraph (5) of the VAT Law, the Input VAT amount that had already been credited for the non-due PPN JLN was reclassified by the Panel as Other Tax Credit.
The analysis and impact of this decision underscore the necessity for Taxpayers to align their Transfer Pricing and VAT arguments. While the final decision partially granted the appeal and resulted in Zero VAT Payable, the Panel's solution via reclassification emphasizes that the validity of claiming PPN JLN Input Tax heavily relies on successfully passing the benefit test in the CIT/TP domain. The primary implication is that multinational corporations must strengthen their TP documentation, particularly in proving the existence and real benefit of every intra-group service to avoid recharacterization that undermines their VAT credit rights.
A key takeaway is the critical importance of being proactive in documenting evidence to refute the classification of shareholder activity from the outset. The Panel's decision to separate services based on their value provides a valuable lesson: standard operational services are more likely to have their VAT credited compared to potentially duplicative or advisory services.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here