Tax equalization is frequently the focal point of tax audits, as seen in the case of PT MRP in Decision Number PUT-000535.16/2024/PP/M.XVIB Year 2025. This dispute centers on a VAT Base (DPP) correction for the November 2020 tax period amounting to IDR 2,345,548,883.00, which the Respondent initiated by equalizing business turnover in the Corporate Income Tax (CIT) return with the VAT returns. The Respondent argued, based on cash and document flow tests, that certain supplies recognized as revenue under accrual accounting had not been subjected to VAT, citing Article 4 paragraph (1) letter a of the VAT Law and Article 12 paragraph (3) of the KUP Law.
PT MRP rigorously contested the correction using the "timing difference" argument. Under PSAK 72 regarding Revenue from Contracts with Customers, commercial accounting recognition may occur before or after the VAT liability arises as stipulated in Article 11 of the VAT Law. The Petitioner proved through reconciliation that all Tax Invoices were issued at the time of actual goods delivery or upon receipt of payment, ensuring no VAT escaped collection, but rather was reported in different periods for CIT and VAT purposes.
The Board of Judges, in its legal considerations, emphasized that mathematical equalization results are not absolute proof of a taxable object. The Board found that the Respondent failed to prove actual supplies meeting VAT liability criteria for the November 2020 period. Conversely, documentary evidence such as invoices, delivery notes, and goods flow presented by the Petitioner convincingly showed that the discrepancy had been reported in the correct tax periods. This decision reaffirms the priority of economic substance and physical delivery evidence over mere administrative reconciliation figures.
The implication of this ruling for Taxpayers is the vital importance of maintaining detailed, routine reconciliation working papers between CIT turnover and the VAT base. PT MRP’s victory serves as a precedent that as long as a Taxpayer can factually prove the flow of goods and the time of delivery, equalization corrections based solely on "on-paper" figures can be legally overturned.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here