Tax authorities are increasingly tightening supervision of intra-group service transactions to prevent base erosion through unsubstantiated transfer pricing schemes. In the dispute between PT VBWAP and the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT), the primary focus lies on the correction of the PPh Article 26 tax base regarding management fees paid to Austria. The DGT reclassified these payments as disguised dividends under Article 9 paragraph (1) letter f of the Income Tax Law, asserting they failed the existence and economic benefit tests for the Indonesian taxpayer.
The core of this conflict centers on differing evidentiary standards between the Taxpayer and the Respondent. PT VBWAP argued that management services from the Austrian headquarters were strategic and administrative, supporting global operations; thus, taxation should refer to Article 7 of the Indonesia-Austria Tax Treaty (Business Profits). However, the DGT emphasized that the Taxpayer failed to provide concrete evidence, such as daily activity logs, specific work reports, or correspondence proving that the services were actually rendered (existence test) and provided economic value add (benefit test) to the Indonesian entity during the December 2019 tax period.
In its legal considerations, the Board of Judges affirmed that in related-party transactions, the burden of proof rests entirely on the Taxpayer to convince the court of the transaction's arm's length nature. After examining the submitted evidence, the Board concluded that documents such as the Intercompany Service Agreement were merely formalistic and overly general. Without supporting evidence showing specific service realization for the disputed period, the Board could not be certain that the transaction was a genuine, arm's length service arrangement.
The implications of this ruling are significant for multinational companies operating in Indonesia. PT VBWAP’s loss demonstrates that a service agreement alone is insufficient to defend intra-group service costs from fiscal correction. This decision reinforces the precedent that transfer pricing documentation must be supported by a clear and specific "audit trail." Failure to prove economic benefits risks the recharacterization of payments as dividends, leading to the loss of deductibility for Corporate Income Tax and higher withholding tax obligations under PPh Article 26.
In conclusion, Taxpayers must be proactive in preparing supporting documentation, including timesheets, project reports, and detailed economic benefit analyses for every service payment made to foreign affiliates.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here