Jakarta (ANTARA) – PT Danantara Sumber Daya Indonesia was established to eliminate export fraud like transfer pricing, not to seize control of natural resource trade, Danantara COO Dony Oskaria clarified.Speaking in Jakarta on Thursday, Oskaria emphasized that the agency was created to act as a regulatory safeguard, ensuring that Indonesia’s strategic commodities are traded at fair and transparent market prices.“That is our true goal. It is not to seize commodities from exporters or act as a middleman to resell them,” he stated.The government’s decision to launch DSI stems from persistent field evidence of widespread corporate misconduct in the extraction sector, particularly transfer pricing and under-invoicing. Transfer pricing occurs when commodities are exported at artificially lower prices to an exporter's affiliated companies abroad.Meanwhile, under-invoicing involves reporting export values lower than the actual transaction value, both of which drastically reduce state revenue.The government, he continued, refuses to allow these practices to persist as they compromise state revenue and minimize the economic benefits that should be received by the public.”The important thing is that transfer pricing and under-invoicing should not occur. So how will the government monitor this? That is why DSI was formed,” Oskaria stated.He further noted that preventing these two illicit practices will be DSI’s core focus during a transition period slated from June 1 to December 31, 2026, as the government builds a one-stop shop for resource exports.During this window, legitimate commercial exporters can conduct operations as usual. However, they must strictly report all activities to DSI via the synchronized export service system operated by the Ministry of Finance’s Directorate General of Customs and Excise (DJBC).The COO urged the private sector not to panic, reassuring corporations that the State has no intention of disrupting stable trade ecosystems or sabotaging economic growth.The government has committed to fully honoring all pre-existing export contracts, with a comprehensive policy evaluation scheduled after the first three months of implementation, he noted.”The government has no intention of destroying our revenue system. In fact, we want our revenue to increase,” Oskaria said.He added that enforcing healthier export governance will ultimately benefit the private sector by boosting global investor confidence in Indonesia's publicly traded natural resource companies.