The Indonesian Investment Coordinating Board (“BKPM”) on April 1, 2020, issued BKPM Regulation No. 1 of 2020 regarding Guidelines for the Implementation of Electronic Integrated Licensing Services (“BKPM Reg. 1/2020”).
The BKPM issued this regulation as part of its authority to provide guidance on business licensing services through the Online Single Submission System (the “OSS System”) under Article 94(1) of Government Regulation No. 24 of 2018 regarding Electronic Integrated Business Licensing Services (“GR 24/2018”) and Presidential Instruction No. 7 of 2019 regarding Acceleration of Ease of Doing Business.
With the issuance of BKPM Reg. 1/2020, the BKPM has set the norms, standards, procedures and criteria for the business licensing framework through the OSS System, as presently governed under BKPM Regulation No. 6 of 2018 regarding Guidelines and Procedures for Capital Investment Licensing and Facilities, and its amendment, BKPM Regulation No. 5 of 2019. BKPM Reg. 1/2020 does not revoke or amend any past BKPM regulations.
Scope of New Regulation
BKPM Reg. 1/2020 covers:
i. access right to the OSS System;
ii. issuance of Business Registration Number (Nomor Induk Berusaha or “NIB”);
iii. business license;
iv. issuance of licenses related to business infrastructure;
v. representative offices; and
vi. other services relevant to business licensing.
Noteworthy Provisions
With 69 articles, BKPM Reg. 1/2020 provides technical guidance on the application for and the issuance of business licenses through the OSS System and a legal basis for new features implemented in OSS System version 1.1.
BKPM Reg. 1/2020 contains provisions applicable to all businesses, foreign and domestic, individuals or entities. However, we will limit our discussion here to provisions relevant to foreign investment. In that context, below are some of the more noteworthy provisions in BKPM Reg. 1/2020.
This means that if a foreign investment company, typically referred to as a PT PMA, intends to engage in the mining services business under KBLI No. 09900 and wholesale trading of office and industrial machinery, spare parts and paraphernalia, which falls under KBLI No. 46591, the total investment value of that company must be more than IDR 20 billion. Or if a PT PMA operates as a data center service provider under KBLI No. 63112, but does so in Jakarta, Surabaya, and Medan, the total investment value of that company must be more than IDR 30 billion because it has three separate project locations.
This has long been an unwritten policy of the BKPM, albeit with inconsistent enforcement, and has now been made an express requirement under this new regulation.
The BKPM provides the following exceptions for wholesale trading, food and beverages, and construction business activities:
Interestingly, the above total investment value requirement is being imposed on PT PMAs that obtained their license on or after the effective date of GR 24/2018, which was June 21, 2018, not after the effective date of BKPM Reg. 1/2020 itself. A possible explanation for this is that the BKPM intended to expressly impose this investment value requirement with the introduction of the OSS System by GR 24/2018, but the system was not yet capable of such implementation and now the BKPM is playing catch up with the rollout of the upgraded OSS System version 1.1.
Under BKPM Reg. 1/2020, the BKPM can revoke a PT PMA’s NIB if it finds that the company has conducted business activities that are inconsistent with its NIB or has violated any provisions of prevailing laws and regulations, or if the PT PMA’s NIB is declared voided or invalid based on a binding court decision and/or the PT PMA requests the revocation of its NIB.
A PT PMA is required to fulfill the commitments under both the main project and supporting project, although only the main project is used to determine the minimum total investment value.
BKPM Reg. 1/2020 also specifies measures to be taken by the BKPM in the event of incompliance by a PT PMA.
Conclusion
Through the issuance of BKPM Reg. 1/2020, it appears the BKPM is trying to minimize uncertainty in the licensing process. It remains to be seen, however, whether OSS System 1.1 itself and the enforcement in the field will raise more questions than BKPM Reg. 1/2020 can answer.
SSEK - 2020
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)