In the modern international taxation landscape, the transfer pricing paradigm has shifted fundamentally. The focus is no longer merely on transaction price matching, but on a deep understanding of how a multinational enterprise (MNE) group creates economic value. This concept is known as Value Chain Analysis and its main principle is the Alignment of Transfer Pricing Outcomes with Value Creation.
Value chain analysis is the process of identifying the sequence of activities performed by a business to create value for its customers. In the context of transfer pricing, this analysis becomes a crucial initial step to understand how functions, assets, and risks are distributed across entities within one MNE group.
Without understanding the value chain, tax authorities and taxpayers alike will find it difficult to determine whether profit allocation between entities is fair. Value chain analysis provides qualitative insight into functional analysis, identifying key organizational aspects that generate profit.
Steps in conducting value chain analysis include:
In Indonesia, MoF Regulation (PMK) 172 of 2023 affirms that industry analysis and analysis of transaction conditions (including functions, assets, and risks) are mandatory stages in the application of the Principle of Fairness and Business Prevalence (PKKU).
The core of the OECD BEPS (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting) Project Actions 8-10 is ensuring that profit allocation aligns with economic substance. "Labels" of contracts or legal ownership alone are no longer sufficient to justify large profit allocations if not supported by activities creating that value.
This principle affirms that if the economic substance of a transaction differs from its formal form (contract), then transfer pricing analysis must be based on its economic substance.
If provisions in the contract differ from the actual behavior of the parties, then the actual behavior must be used to delineate the actual transaction (accurately delineated transaction). Tax authorities have the right to disregard or recharacterize transactions if the arrangement is commercially irrational or lacks economic substance.
Legal ownership of intangible assets does not automatically grant rights to all generated profits. Analysis must identify functions:
Or often referred to as DAEMPE (with Acquisition). "Cash box" entities without DAEMPE functions are only entitled to a risk-free return.
Risk allocation in contracts must be tested with two key questions:
Understanding the value chain and value creation significantly influences the selection of transfer pricing methods:
Taxpayers must be able to tell this "story" of value creation in the Transfer Pricing Document (TP Doc).
Aligning transfer pricing outcomes with value creation is not merely administrative compliance, but the foundation of a defensible transfer pricing analysis. Taxpayers can ensure profit allocation reflects economic reality, not merely contract engineering, to minimize dispute risks and comply with the substance over form principle.
Is My Company Required to Create a Transfer Pricing Document?