Disputes regarding the crediting of Input Tax often stem from the tax authority's rigid interpretation of Article 9, paragraph (8), letter b of the VAT Law concerning the "direct connection" to business activities. In the case of PT SPC, the Respondent issued a significant correction to the Input Tax for the December 2020 tax period, claiming that vehicle operational costs lacked a direct correlation with taxable deliveries and were thus non-creditable.
The core of this conflict centered on the materiality test of company asset utilization. The Respondent argued that maintenance and operational costs for management vehicles were administrative in nature and not directly linked to the primary production or distribution lines. Conversely, PT SPC asserted that these vehicles were crucial instruments for managerial mobility, supporting overall business operations to maintain and secure company income (3M costs).
The Board of Judges, in their deliberation, provided a more progressive and comprehensive interpretation. The Judges ruled that as long as the Taxpayer performs deliveries subject to VAT, all supporting management costs—including operational vehicles—automatically possess a connection to business activities. The Board rejected a narrow approach that only links Input Tax to physical production processes.
The implications of this ruling reinforce the importance of robust asset documentation for Taxpayers. PT SPC's success in proving that the vehicles were used for corporate purposes serves as an important precedent that management costs are an integral part of business activities, making the associated Input Tax valid for credit. This decision provides legal certainty that the interpretation of "direct connection" should not be used restrictively to invalidate the Taxpayer's constitutional right to credit Input Tax.