Facebook gets initial
approval to set up local unit in Indonesia: source
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[June 19, 2017]
By John Chalmers and Eveline Danubrata
JAKARTA
(Reuters) - Facebook Inc has received an in-principle approval to set up
a domestic unit in Indonesia, said a senior government source from the
Southeast Asian nation, home to the social networking giant's
fourth-largest user base.
Indonesia has been pushing multinational technology firms to be locally
incorporated, arguing that companies such as Alphabet Inc's Google set
up small business entities to provide "auxiliary" services and get away
with minimal taxation, while booking most of their revenue from the
country elsewhere.
In fact, Google has been locked in a months-long dispute over
allegations by Indonesia's government that the search giant had not made
enough annual payments. The outcome of this is expected to indicate how
the government may pursue others such as Facebook and Twitter Inc for
taxes.
Facebook is now in the process of establishing a local unit in the
country, said the senior government source, who has direct knowledge of
the matter but declined to be identified as the information was not
public. The social media giant currently operates in Indonesia through
an office in central Jakarta.
Indonesia had 69 million monthly active Facebook users as of the first
quarter of 2014, placing the country fourth globally after the United
States, India and Brazil, according to data from the company.
Facebook did not respond to requests for comment and has not provided an
update on the number of its users in Indonesia.
The office that Facebook opened in Indonesia three years ago allows it
to work with advertisers as well as small and medium businesses "that
need an education on how to market their products", a Facebook executive
told local media at the time. (http://bit.ly/1nRZJ0x)
But according to an official at Indonesia's communications ministry, "Facebook
only appoints people in Jakarta when the need arises, no more than that.
Whether they have a permanent office here or not, we don't even know."
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Facebook logo is seen at a start-up companies gathering at Paris'
Station F in Paris, France, January 17, 2017. REUTERS/Philippe
Wojazer/File Photo
Indonesia is eager to ramp up tax collection to narrow its budget deficit and
fund an ambitious infrastructure program. Other governments around the world are
also seeking to clamp down on what they see as corporate tax avoidance.
Last
week, the communications minister said Google's Asia Pacific headquarters had
agreed on future tax payments in Indonesia. But he declined to comment on
whether they had resolved their dispute over taxes for past years.
It was also unclear if Google would set up a domestic unit that is separate from
its existing local entity, PT Google Indonesia, which tax officials allege
simply acts as a sales service provider.
Indonesia's tax office estimates the total advertising revenue for the industry
in the country at around $830 million, with Google and Facebook accounting for
around 70 percent.
However, Google has pointed to a joint study by the firm and Singapore state
investor Temasek that estimated the size of Indonesia's digital advertising
market at $300 million for 2015.
(Reporting by John Chalmers and Eveline Danubrata, additional reporting by Cindy
Silviana, Hidayat Setiaji and Jakarta Newsroom; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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