Google may face over $400 million Indonesia tax bill for 2015 - govt official
Google may face over $400 million Indonesia tax bill for
2015 - govt official
By Gayatri Suroyo and Eveline Danubrata September 19,
2016
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia plans to pursue Alphabet
Inc's Google for five years of back taxes, and the search giant could face a
bill of more than $400 million for 2015 alone if it is found to have avoided
payments, a senior tax official said.
Muhammad Hanif, head of the tax office's special cases
branch, told Reuters its investigators went to Google's local office in
Indonesia on Monday.
The tax office alleges PT Google Indonesia paid less than
0.1 percent of the total income and value-added taxes it owed last year.
Asked to respond to Hanif's comments, Google Indonesia
reiterated a statement made last week in which it said it continues to
cooperate with local authorities and has paid all applicable taxes.
If found guilty, Google could have to pay fines of up to
four times the amount it owed, bringing the maximum tax bill to 5.5 trillion
rupiah ($418 million) for 2015, Hanif said. He declined to provide an estimate
for the five-year period.
Most of the revenue generated in the country is booked at
Google's Asia Pacific headquarters in Singapore. Google Asia Pacific declined
to be audited in June, prompting the tax office to escalate the case into a
criminal one, Hanif said.
"Google's argument is that they just did tax
planning," Hanif said. "Tax planning is legal, but aggressive tax
planning - to the extent that the country where the revenue is made does not
get anything - is not legal."
The tax office will summon directors from Google Indonesia
who also hold positions at Google Asia Pacific, Hanif said, adding that it is
working with the Indonesian police.
Globally, it is rare for a state investigation of
corporate tax structures to be escalated into a criminal case.
It normally takes at least three years for an Indonesian
court to make a decision on a tax criminal case, said Yustinus Prastowo,
executive director of the Center for Indonesia Taxation Analysis.
The tax office is planning to chase back taxes from other
companies that deliver content through the internet (over-the-top service
providers) in Indonesia, Hanif said.
The Indonesian communication and information ministry is
working on a new regulation for OTT providers, and the tax office has proposed
that a company with a "network presence" in Indonesia should also be
subject to taxation.
Total advertising revenue for the industry is estimated
at $830 million a year, with Google and Facebook Inc accounting for around 70
percent of that, according to Hanif.
A joint study by Google and Singapore state investor
Temasek released earlier this year, however, estimated the size of Indonesia's
digital advertising market at $300 million for 2015.
($1 = 13,155.00 rupiah)
https://www.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-google-may-face-indonesia-tax-bill-over-090730918--finance.html
Comments
Post a Comment