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Govt cuts taxes for conversion of export proceeds

Since last year, natural resource exporters from Indonesia must retain for at least three months in the domestic financial system 30 percent of their proceeds.

Reuters
Jakarta
Thu, May 23, 2024

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Govt cuts taxes for conversion of export proceeds Workers walk near a tugboat carrying coal barges at a port in Palembang, South Sumatra province, Indonesia, January 4, 2022. (Reuters)

T

he government has cut taxes for exporters who converted their earnings to rupiah in a new regulation issued this week aimed at boosting foreign exchange supply.

Since last year, natural resource exporters from Indonesia must retain for at least three months in the domestic financial system 30 percent of their proceeds.

Authorities have been encouraging exporters to convert these proceeds into rupiah and keep them longer in the domestic banking system to bolster domestic US dollar supply amid tight global liquidity. Some exporters, however, have opted not to convert due to exchange rate volatility.

In the new regulation seen by Reuters, exporters will be taxed a maximum 5% for interest gained from their deposits if converted into rupiah, down from 7.5 percent previously.

The government has also widened the choice of instruments in which exporters can put their earnings and receive the tax breaks to include instruments issued by Bank Indonesia and promissory notes issued by Indonesia's Eximbank.

"This will surely increase exporters' interest to keep their earnings in domestic accounts," Filianingsih Hendarta, Bank Indonesia's (BI) deputy governor, told reporters on Wednesday.

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Under existing rules, exporters can pass on their funds at local banks on to the central bank and receive favorable rates from BI.

Currently, about $1.8 billion to $1.9 billion of such funds are kept at BI, the central bank said.

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