Corrections to the Value Added Tax (VAT) Export Base often emerge as derivative disputes resulting from transfer pricing audits on Corporate Income Tax (CIT). In the case of PT JSSI, the Respondent performed a secondary adjustment by correcting the export value for the March 2021 Tax Period using the Cost Plus method on a transaction-by-transaction basis with a 13.89% mark-up. This regulatory move was based on Article 2 paragraph (1) of the VAT Law and Article 18 paragraph (3) of the CIT Law to ensure that deliveries to affiliates reflect fair market prices.
The core of the conflict in court centered on methodological differences and the recognition of economic conditions. The Respondent rejected the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM) proposed by the Taxpayer, claiming it failed to reflect the ex-ante principle. Conversely, PT JSSI emphasized that the operating losses incurred during 2020 were genuine business losses caused by the severe impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, which slashed sales volume by 50%. The Taxpayer argued that the Respondent's application of the Cost Plus method lacked adequate comparability analysis, specifically regarding the absence of identical functional and risk data.
The Board of Judges, in its legal consideration, adopted a stance consistent with the principle of connected disputes. Since this VAT correction was a domino effect of the 2020 CIT dispute, the Board referred to the findings of that primary case. In the CIT proceedings, the Board ruled that PT JSSI's affiliated transactions complied with the Arm's Length Principle (ALP). Legally, if the primary correction (CIT) is not upheld, then any derivative corrections on Export VAT must be declared void by law.
The implications of this ruling reinforce the importance of consistency in argumentation between CIT and VAT disputes when facing transfer pricing issues. For Taxpayers, successfully defending the TNMM method during a pandemic demonstrates that fiscal losses are not always synonymous with unfair transfer pricing, provided they are backed by valid evidence of market decline. This decision serves as a significant precedent that secondary adjustments in VAT cannot stand alone without a solid correction foundation at the CIT level.
In conclusion, the Board of Judges fully granted the Taxpayer's appeal. This proves that robust transfer pricing documentation and clear explanations of macroeconomic conditions (such as the pandemic) are key to winning disputes at the Tax Court.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here