Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Government prepares incentives for exporters in relation to new foreign exchange policy

Reading Time: 2 minutes
Imanuddin Razak

Journalist

Editor

Interview

Following the recent policy on mandatory deposit of foreign exchange originated from export, the government is planning to provide more appealing incentives for exporters who complied with the policy.

The Secretary of the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, Susiwijono Moegiarso, explained that previously, in Government Regulation No. 123 of 2015, the government provided income tax (PPh) incentives on foreign exchange deposit interest for placing foreign exchange earnings. These regulations are set to be amended in the upcoming RPP.

Under the existing regulations, a 10% PPh rate is imposed on foreign exchange deposits for natural resources (SDA) with a 1-month term. Additionally, a 7.5% rate applies to deposits with a 3-month term and a 2.5% rate for deposits with a 6-month term. There is a 0% rate for deposits with terms exceeding 6 months.

With Government Regulation No. 36 of 2023, the government intends to offer even more enticing incentives, particularly for the four SDA sectors that are obligated to retain foreign exchange earnings domestically for 3 months: mining, agriculture, forestry, and fisheries.

“So, there will be more fiscal incentives given,” said Susiwijono in Jakarta on Monday (August 14).

Susiwijono also added that the Ministry of Finance is currently actively discussing the changes to Government Regulation No. 123 of 2015. The regulation already provides PPh incentives on foreign exchange deposit interest. However, Susiwijono noted that the regulation has not specifically addressed the 7 DHE SDA placement instruments prepared by Bank Indonesia (BI).

“It’s currently being solidified. The leaked information suggests the incentives will be more appealing, but the exact amounts are in the finalization stage,” Susiwijono said in Jakarta on Monday (August 14).

Here are the seven DHE incentive instruments being prepared by the government:

  1. Special accounts that investors can use to store foreign exchange if they do not wish to allocate it to other instruments.
  2. Foreign exchange deposits.
  3. Foreign exchange stored in the Indonesian Export Financing Institution (LPEI) can be used as a promissory note or a letter of commitment to pay. This promissory note can be forwarded to BI.
  4. Foreign exchange term deposits (TD valas) that enable banks to transfer DHE SDA to the central bank.
  5. DHE stored as deposits or promissory notes in LPEI can be used as cash collateral to obtain loans from banks. This way, exporters no longer need to worry about the availability of the Indonesian rupiah if their DHE needs to be parked in a special account.
  6. DHE deposits can be used for swaps to meet the rupiah needs of exporters.
  7. BI also provides swap transactions with banks.
Imanuddin Razak

Journalist

 

Editor

 

Interview

SUBSCRIBE NOW
We will provide you with an invoice for your reimbursable expenses.

Free

New to Indonesian market? Read our free articles before subscribing to the premium plan. If you already run your business in Indonesia, make sure to subscribe to the premium subscription so you won’t miss any intelligence & business opportunities.

Premium

$550 USD/Year

or

$45 USD/Month

Cancelation: you can cancel your subscription at any time, by sending us an email inquiry@ibp-media.com

Add keywords to your market watch and receive notification:
Schedule a free consultation with us:

We’ll contact you for confirmation.

FURTHER READING

The Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW) reveals that the substantial costs borne by political parties and individualshave been fueling a cyclical pattern of corruption in both the general elections (Pemilu) and the regional elections (Pilkada).
A recent survey by the Indonesian Political Indicator Institute (IPI) revealed a decline in public trust towards the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) following legislative revisions.
Indonesia has taken a firm stance in support of Palestine during the Emergency Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, the U.S. As one of the 77 co-sponsors of the resolution titled “Admission of New Members in the United Nations,” alongside 143 other UN member states, Indonesia has voiced its strong support for granting special privileges to Palestine.
The Indonesian Marine Corps and its U.S. counterpart jointly participated in the Indonesian Reconnaissance Exercise (RECONEX) held in Antralina, Jampang Tengah, Sukabumi Regency, West Java, on April 24-May 10, 2024.
The National Mandate Party (PAN) has voiced its support on the proposed expansion of ministerial roles in the forthcoming Prabowo Subianto-Gibran Rakabuming Raka administration.
The proposal by President elect Prabowo Subianto to establish a presidential club as a communication forum for the country’s newly elected pair and former pairs of State leadership has won the support of Speaker of the People’s Consultative Assembly (MPR) Bambang Soesatyo.