Perhaps the most talked-about regulation in 2015 was Bank Indonesia’s regulation and circular letter on the mandatory use of rupiah. These were Bank Indonesia Regulation No. 17/3/PBI/2015 regarding the Mandatory Use of Rupiah within the Republic of Indonesia (“BI Reg 17/2015”) and Bank Indonesia Circular Letter No. 17/11/DKSP regarding the Mandatory Use of Rupiah within the Territory of the Republic of Indonesia (“CL 17”), which implemented BI Reg 17/2015. BI Reg 17/2015 and CL 17 are collectively referred to here as “BI Regulations on Rupiah.”
Bank Indonesia (“BI”) has the authority to regulate monetary affairs in Indonesia, including the obligation to use rupiah in transactions in Indonesia, as the monetary and payment system authority based on Law No. 23 of 1999 regarding Bank Indonesia, last amended by Law No. 6 of 2009 (the “BI Law”).
Before the BI Regulations on Rupiah were issued, the Currency Law, Law No. 7 regarding Currency, already required the mandatory use of rupiah for cash transactions. The BI Regulations on Rupiah extended this concept also to apply to non-cash transactions and set out more detailed requirements on the mandatory use of rupiah than what was already regulated by the Currency Law. BI believed that the depreciation of the rupiah was in significant part caused by events outside Indonesia that were beyond Indonesia’s control. BI also believed that many local transactions were conducted in US Dollars, thus creating an unnecessary demand for that currency. Thus, the purpose of the BI Regulations on the rupiah was to stabilise the exchange rate in the face of ongoing depreciation of the currency.
BI justified these new rules on the basis of national sovereignty and the integrity of the rupiah – every country has the right to require the use of its own currency for domestic transactions. The BI Regulations on Rupiah are based on the territorial principle that every transaction conducted in Indonesia, whether performed by Indonesian citizens or non-citizens, and whether cash or non-cash transactions, should be in rupiah.
Whether BI went too far in some cases and adversely affected international transactions remains to be seen. BI is addressing on a case-by-case basis particular issues that may not be clearly covered by a number of exemptions in the BI Regulations on Rupiah.
There are several types of transactions that are exempted from the mandatory use of rupiah, such as transactions related to the state budget, grants and bank deposits. Other exempt transactions include the following:
Price quotations or price clauses in an agreement for any transaction in Indonesia must be in rupiah and a dual quotation (i.e., one made concurrently in both rupiah and in a foreign currency) is prohibited. However, BI has confirmed that an agreement that stipulates a price in rupiah that is subject to exchange rate movements is not prohibited. With regard to this issue, BI’s Guidelines on Questions and Answers on the Mandatory Use of Rupiah in the Territory of Indonesia issued in September 2015 have confirmed this view and further stated that the parties can agree to a formula that has a foreign currency component.
The BI Regulations on Rupiah provide that any written agreement regarding payment in foreign currency for a non-cash transaction made before 1st July 2015 is effective until the expiration of the written agreement. The extension or any amendment to such written agreement (among others, the change of the parties, the price of goods or services, or the object of the agreement) made after 1st July 2015 is subject to the BI Regulations on Rupiah. A written agreement that is a derivative or an implementation of a main agreement made after 1st July 2015 is treated as an independent agreement and is subject to the provisions in the BI Regulations on Rupiah.
SKK Migas and BI have arranged to separately agree on the types of transactions in the oil and gas sector that are covered by the BI Regulations on Rupiah.
SSEK - 19th july 2016
Capital: Jakarta
Population: 259 million (2016)
Currency: Indonesian Rupiah
Nominal GDP: $936 billion USD (IMF, 2016)
GDP Per Capita: $3,620 USD at Current Prices (IMF, 2016)
GDP Growth: 5.0% (2016)
External Debt: 36.80% of GDP (BI, Q2 2016)
Ease of Doing Business: 91/190 (WB, 2017)
Corruption Index: 90/176 (TI, 2016)