In Indonesia's upstream oil and gas sector, operational cost efficiency is key to maximizing state revenue. One operational cost component under government scrutiny is labor costs, specifically remuneration for Foreign Workers (TKA/Expatriates). Given that this industry utilizes the Cost Recovery mechanism, the government regulates expenses claimed by Cooperation Contract Contractors (KKKS) to ensure they remain reasonable and do not erode the state's share of profits.
To this end, the Government, through the Ministry of Finance, has established maximum remuneration limits for expatriates that can be claimed as a deductible expense or refunded through the profit-sharing calculation.
Not all expatriates in the Oil and Gas sector are automatically subject to this specific rule. This regulation specifically targets expatriates working under an assignment from the contractor's parent company, known as Inter-Corporate Transfer (ICT). These expatriates must possess valid work permits.
Remuneration in this context includes wages, allowances, and payments related to annual performance (annual bonuses), but excludes long-term incentives.
The government does not apply a single figure for all expatriates. The maximum remuneration limit is structured based on a fair matrix, considering two main factors: Country of Origin (Passport) and Job Level/Category.
According to the Appendix of PMK Number 258/PMK.011/2011, there are three passport region categories:
The higher the cost of living and salary standards in the origin region, the higher the maximum limit tends to be. Additionally, job levels are categorized as:
The most crucial point of this rule is the treatment of excess payments. If a KKKS pays an expatriate more than the established limit, the excess amount cannot be claimed in cost recovery and is non-deductible from the KKKS's gross income when calculating Corporate Income Tax.
However, it must be noted that this limit applies only to the company's Cost Recovery. For the expatriate individually, the entire income received—whether below or above the maximum limit—remains a taxable object subject to full withholding under Article 21 or Article 26 Income Tax.
The government recognizes that the Oil and Gas industry requires specific expertise that may be very rare. Therefore, this maximum limit does not apply to expatriates possessing highly specialized and very rare skills. The criteria for such expertise are determined by the Implementing Body (now SKK Migas) with the approval of the Minister of Finance.
Mr. Smith (USA Passport) is a General Manager (Executive/Level-1 Position) at a KKKS in Indonesia.
The policy on limiting expatriate remuneration costs serves as a state control mechanism to preserve the state's share of oil and gas proceeds from being eroded by excessive personnel costs, while respecting individual employment contracts by ensuring personal income tax obligations are fully met.