The Value Added Tax (VAT) law in Indonesia provides a facility for deducting Input Tax (PM) for Taxable Entrepreneurs (PKP) who have not yet made taxable goods/services deliveries, as stipulated in Article 9 paragraphs (6a) and (6c) of the VAT Law, regulated further by Minister of Finance Regulation Number 18/PMK.03/2021. In the case study of PT MPS, the Directorate General of Taxes (DJP) imposed a correction of Rp. 12,345,820,492.00 based on the assumption that this PKP, engaged in the Industrial Forest Plantation (IUPHHK-HTI) sector, failed to meet the requirement of "having delivered their own produced Taxable Goods (BKP) which are directly related to their business activities" within the 5 (five) year limit since the first Input Tax deduction (May 2015). This is a crucial issue, as failure to meet this requirement results in the obligation to repay all previously credited Input Tax.
The core conflict revolves around the interpretation of the phrase "directly related." The DJP maintained a narrow, output-centric view, considering the main product to be harvested fiberwood. Consequently, the delivery of BKP in the initial stages (natural wood from land clearing and ready-to-plant seedlings) was not recognized as directly related to the main business. According to the DJP, the wood from land clearing was a by-product/waste, while the seedlings were not the final product.
PT MPS's refutation, which was ultimately supported by the Panel of Judges, adopted a broader, process-centric approach. PT MPS successfully demonstrated that the IUPHHK-HTI activity is a single, integrated production chain. The delivery of natural wood from land clearing was justified as an activity that is mandatory and inherent in Land Preparation according to the Ministry of Environment and Forestry Regulation, making it a BKP delivery directly related to the business. Likewise, the sale of seedlings (since 2016) was recognized as an integral part of the production process. Since these directly related BKP deliveries were proven to have occurred before the 5-year deadline (May 2020), the Panel of Judges ruled that PT MPS could not be categorized as a PKP not yet producing.
This Tax Court Decision explicitly overturned the DJP's correction and granted the appeal in its entirety, resulting in Zero VAT payable. The implication of this ruling is highly significant: for PKPs in capital-intensive sectors with long production cycles, the determination of "having produced" must consider the entire value chain. Taxpayers must utilize sectoral regulations to strengthen their "direct relationship" argument, allowing BKP deliveries in the pre-production stage to be recognized, thereby protecting their Input Tax deduction rights from the risk of correction resulting from PMK 18/2021.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here.