This research aims to analyze the regulatory implications and institutional complexities of dormant account blocking policies implemented by Indonesia's Financial Intelligence Unit (Pusat Pelaporan dan Analisis Transaksi Keuangan - PPATK) within the Indonesian banking system, focusing on regulatory harmonization, institutional coordination, and the balance between anti-money laundering enforcement effectiveness and customers' fundamental rights protection. This study employs a normative juridical method with conceptual and comparative approaches toward international regulatory frameworks. Primary data comprises anti-money laundering legislation, banking regulations, and consumer protection laws. Secondary data was collected through systematic literature studies of 50 academic publications from the 2022-2025 period indexed in Scopus Q1-Q3 and Web of Science, alongside analysis of international regulatory practices, Master’s Thesis and Doctor Philoshopy. Data analysis was conducted qualitatively using legal interpretation techniques and gap analysis between normative provisions and practical implementation. Research findings reveal five primary regulatory problems: (1) absence of firm legal definitions regarding dormant accounts in Indonesia's regulatory framework; (2) authority imbalance between PPATK under Law No. 8 of 2010 and procedural due process principles; (3) coordination disharmony among supervisory institutions (PPATK, Financial Services Authority, and Bank Indonesia) creating regulatory overlap; (4) regulatory impacts on financial inclusion and banking service accessibility; and (5) urgent need for regulatory frameworks integrating financial privacy protection under Law No. 27 of 2022.. This research provides theoretical contributions to banking law dogmatics development regarding balanced regulatory approaches between financial supervision functions and consumer protection. Practically, these findings serve as blueprints for responsive regulatory reform integrating anti-money laundering effectiveness with strengthened procedural safeguards, graduated response system implementation, and development of harmonious institutional coordination mechanisms.
Published in | Humanities and Social Sciences (Volume 13, Issue 5) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20 |
Page(s) | 498-509 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2025. Published by Science Publishing Group |
PPATK, Dormant Accounts, Regulatory Implications, Regulatory Harmonization, Institutional Coordination, Banking Compliance, Procedural Due Process, Financial Intelligence Unit
Country/ FIU | Dormant Account Definition | Blocking Procedures | Safeguards/ Protections | Regulatory Framework |
---|---|---|---|---|
United States (FinCEN) | 12-24 months without activity, depending on account type and state | Risk-based approach with graduated response system | Adequate notice (30-60 days), right to appeal, compensation mechanism | Bank Secrecy Act + Fourth Amendment procedural protections |
Australia (AUSTRAC) | 7 years for account balances, 3 years for inactive accounts | Cooperative enforcement with banks, multi-step verification | Mandatory customer notification, dispute resolution process | Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 |
European Union (EBA) | Harmonized standard: 12 months with variations per member state | Procedural safeguards mandatory, cross-border coordination | GDPR compliance, right to be forgotten, data portability | Payment Services Directive 2 (PSD2) + 4th Anti-Money Laundering Directive |
Canada (FINTRAC) | 10 years for unclaimed balances, 2 years for monitoring | Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) compliance with due process | Charter rights protection, judicial review availability | Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act |
Japan (JAFIC) | 10 years for dormant deposits, strict documentation requirements | Consensus-based approach with banking industry cooperation | Customer consent required, transparent process documentation | Act on Prevention of Transfer of Criminal Proceeds + Financial Instruments and Exchange Act |
Thailand | 10 years for dormant accounts based on Bank of Thailand regulations | Implementation of AML/CFT standards with institutional coordination | Customer notification 6 months before transfer, appeal mechanism | Anti-Money Laundering Act B.E. 2542 (1999) + amendments |
Malaysia | 7 years for Islamic banking, with considerations for digital inheritance | Shariah-compliant procedures for Islamic accounts, BNM coordination | Inheritance law integration, family notification requirements | Anti-Money Laundering, Anti-Terrorism Financing and Proceeds of Unlawful Activities Act 2001 |
Nigeria (NFIU) | Variable based on account type, minimum 6 months for basic accounts | Risk-based assessment with focus on financial inclusion | Basic account protection, tiered KYC requirements | Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2011 + CBN regulations |
South Africa | 3 years for basic accounts, 7 years for investment accounts | FSCA Conduct Standards compliance with consumer protection focus | Treating Customers Fairly principles, ombudsman access | Financial Intelligence Centre Act 38 of 2001 + Financial Sector Conduct Authority Act |
Indonesia (PPATK) | No firm legal definition (6-12 months banking practice) | Administrative blocking without graduated response | Limited safeguards, no standardized appeal process | UU No. 8/2010 (gaps dalam procedural due process) |
Comparison Aspects | International Best Practices | Indonesia (Current State) |
---|---|---|
Legal Definition | Clear statutory definitions (12-24 months consensus) | No firm legal definition, varies by bank policy (6-12 months) |
Procedural Safeguards | Mandatory notice period (30-90 days), due process requirements | Limited safeguards, ad hoc notification processes |
Appeal Mechanisms | Structured appeal processes, judicial review, ombudsman access | No standardized appeal process, limited recourse options |
Inter-agency Coordination | Clear division of authority, coordination protocols, information sharing agreements | Overlapping authority (PPATK, OJK, BI), coordination gaps |
Technology Integration | AI/ML with privacy-by-design, algorithmic transparency, audit trails | Advanced surveillance without adequate privacy protections |
Compensation Framework | Established compensation for wrongful blocking, liability frameworks | No systematic compensation mechanism |
Financial Inclusion Impact | Tiered approach, protection for vulnerable segments, basic account exemptions | Blanket approach potentially harming financial inclusion goals |
International Cooperation | FATF compliance with balanced approach, cross-border information sharing | FATF membership achieved (2023) but implementation gaps remain |
Reform Area | Recommended Action | International Model | Implementation Priority |
---|---|---|---|
Legal Framework Harmonization | Adopt harmonized definition (12 months) with Indonesian contextual adjustments | European Banking Authority (EBA) | High |
Graduated Response Implementation | Implement risk-based approach with multi-tier verification | US FinCEN | High |
Procedural Safeguards Enhancement | Establish cooperative enforcement with mandatory customer protection | Australia (AUSTRAC) | High |
Inter-agency Coordination Protocol | Develop clear division of authority model and coordination framework | Canada (FINTRAC) | Medium |
Technology Governance | Implement privacy protections in automated monitoring systems | European Union (GDPR) | Medium |
Compensation Mechanism | Establish liability framework for wrongful blocking cases | United States | Medium |
Financial Inclusion Protection | Adopt tiered approach for vulnerable segments | Nigeria/South Africa | Low |
ASEAN | Association of Southeast Asian Nations |
AUSTRAC | Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre |
BI | Bank Indonesia |
CAMA | Companies and Allied Matters Act |
FATF | Financial Action Task Force |
FinCEN | Financial Crimes Enforcement Network |
FINTRAC | Financial Transactions and Report Analysis Centre |
FIU | Financial Intelligence Unit |
GDPR | General Data Protection Regulation |
NFIU | Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit |
OJK | The Indonesian Financial Services Authority (Otoritas Jasa Keuangan) |
PPATK | Pusat Pelaporan dan Analisis Transaksi Keuangan (Indonesia's Financial Intelligence Unit |
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APA Style
Gisymar, N. A., Rusmala, E., Suyikati, Anindita, Zaki Sierrad. (2025). Regulatory Implications of PPATK's Dormant Account Blocking in Indonesia's Banking System: A Legal Analysis. Humanities and Social Sciences, 13(5), 498-509. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20
ACS Style
Gisymar, N. A.; Rusmala, E.; Suyikati; Anindita; Zaki Sierrad. Regulatory Implications of PPATK's Dormant Account Blocking in Indonesia's Banking System: A Legal Analysis. Humanit. Soc. Sci. 2025, 13(5), 498-509. doi: 10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20
@article{10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20, author = {Najib Ali Gisymar and Erna Rusmala and Suyikati and Anindita and Zaki Sierrad}, title = {Regulatory Implications of PPATK's Dormant Account Blocking in Indonesia's Banking System: A Legal Analysis }, journal = {Humanities and Social Sciences}, volume = {13}, number = {5}, pages = {498-509}, doi = {10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.hss.20251305.20}, abstract = {This research aims to analyze the regulatory implications and institutional complexities of dormant account blocking policies implemented by Indonesia's Financial Intelligence Unit (Pusat Pelaporan dan Analisis Transaksi Keuangan - PPATK) within the Indonesian banking system, focusing on regulatory harmonization, institutional coordination, and the balance between anti-money laundering enforcement effectiveness and customers' fundamental rights protection. This study employs a normative juridical method with conceptual and comparative approaches toward international regulatory frameworks. Primary data comprises anti-money laundering legislation, banking regulations, and consumer protection laws. Secondary data was collected through systematic literature studies of 50 academic publications from the 2022-2025 period indexed in Scopus Q1-Q3 and Web of Science, alongside analysis of international regulatory practices, Master’s Thesis and Doctor Philoshopy. Data analysis was conducted qualitatively using legal interpretation techniques and gap analysis between normative provisions and practical implementation. Research findings reveal five primary regulatory problems: (1) absence of firm legal definitions regarding dormant accounts in Indonesia's regulatory framework; (2) authority imbalance between PPATK under Law No. 8 of 2010 and procedural due process principles; (3) coordination disharmony among supervisory institutions (PPATK, Financial Services Authority, and Bank Indonesia) creating regulatory overlap; (4) regulatory impacts on financial inclusion and banking service accessibility; and (5) urgent need for regulatory frameworks integrating financial privacy protection under Law No. 27 of 2022.. This research provides theoretical contributions to banking law dogmatics development regarding balanced regulatory approaches between financial supervision functions and consumer protection. Practically, these findings serve as blueprints for responsive regulatory reform integrating anti-money laundering effectiveness with strengthened procedural safeguards, graduated response system implementation, and development of harmonious institutional coordination mechanisms. }, year = {2025} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Regulatory Implications of PPATK's Dormant Account Blocking in Indonesia's Banking System: A Legal Analysis AU - Najib Ali Gisymar AU - Erna Rusmala AU - Suyikati AU - Anindita AU - Zaki Sierrad Y1 - 2025/10/22 PY - 2025 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20 DO - 10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20 T2 - Humanities and Social Sciences JF - Humanities and Social Sciences JO - Humanities and Social Sciences SP - 498 EP - 509 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8184 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.hss.20251305.20 AB - This research aims to analyze the regulatory implications and institutional complexities of dormant account blocking policies implemented by Indonesia's Financial Intelligence Unit (Pusat Pelaporan dan Analisis Transaksi Keuangan - PPATK) within the Indonesian banking system, focusing on regulatory harmonization, institutional coordination, and the balance between anti-money laundering enforcement effectiveness and customers' fundamental rights protection. This study employs a normative juridical method with conceptual and comparative approaches toward international regulatory frameworks. Primary data comprises anti-money laundering legislation, banking regulations, and consumer protection laws. Secondary data was collected through systematic literature studies of 50 academic publications from the 2022-2025 period indexed in Scopus Q1-Q3 and Web of Science, alongside analysis of international regulatory practices, Master’s Thesis and Doctor Philoshopy. Data analysis was conducted qualitatively using legal interpretation techniques and gap analysis between normative provisions and practical implementation. Research findings reveal five primary regulatory problems: (1) absence of firm legal definitions regarding dormant accounts in Indonesia's regulatory framework; (2) authority imbalance between PPATK under Law No. 8 of 2010 and procedural due process principles; (3) coordination disharmony among supervisory institutions (PPATK, Financial Services Authority, and Bank Indonesia) creating regulatory overlap; (4) regulatory impacts on financial inclusion and banking service accessibility; and (5) urgent need for regulatory frameworks integrating financial privacy protection under Law No. 27 of 2022.. This research provides theoretical contributions to banking law dogmatics development regarding balanced regulatory approaches between financial supervision functions and consumer protection. Practically, these findings serve as blueprints for responsive regulatory reform integrating anti-money laundering effectiveness with strengthened procedural safeguards, graduated response system implementation, and development of harmonious institutional coordination mechanisms. VL - 13 IS - 5 ER -