Over the past four years, the Indonesian Directorate General of Tax (DGT) has been placing great focus on the tax potential from related-party transactions within multinational groups of companies. The DGT has issued regulations on transfer pricing guidelines, developed its human resources, equipped itself with commercial database, and undertaken audits particularly when there are intercompany transactions. Sri Wahyuni of SF Consulting provides an overview of the changes and explains what taxpayers need to do to guard against audit.
Unlock this content.
The content you are trying to view is exclusive to our subscribers.
While Brazil’s consumption tax overhaul led to a short-term spike in tax advisory demand, we are now in a period of ‘normalisation’ marked by decreased recruitment
Meanwhile, one expert highlights the importance of separating Venezuela’s tax authority from direct political control after ‘lost decades and isolation’
With PMK 108, Indonesia has upgraded its tax transparency regime for the digital era, focusing on data quality, governance, and cross border exchange rather than expanding regulatory reach
In a popular LinkedIn post, Jeremie Beitel encouraged firms to invest in junior talent even if it doesn’t lead to their loyalty, though recruiters offered ITR a mixed assessment
Valid pillar two objectives are still intact after the side-by-side agreement, but whether the framework is now settled is ‘a $64,000 question’, Morrison Foerster’s tax chair told ITR