The Peru success story
To get the long view, looking at countries like Peru provides a roadmap of what is possible. In the 1990s, the country was emerging from years of political turmoil and economic instability. Peruvian leaders made identification a priority. Starting from an incomplete voter-registration database of adults, Peru built its with political will, a constitutional mandate and the use of biometric technology. Today, Peru has achieved nearly 99% identification of their population, including children. Because the system is built on up-to-date technology, it is interoperable: A person¡¯s identity can be authenticated across different programmes and agencies. This access to government-funded social programmes is a powerful tool to reduce poverty.
On our continent, some countries like South Africa have achieved noteworthy identification systems. In other countries, like Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Tanzania and Guinea, leaders have already begun to take advantage of technological advances that make identification more feasible and affordable. People are leveraging technology to leapfrog over old-fashioned, paper-based approaches, improving the delivery of identification services by using mobile devices to register births, biometrics to ensure uniqueness and SMS notifications to help applicants track the status of ID applications. They have embarked on ambitious plans to expand identification systems via outreach campaigns to remote and under-served populations, which will increase the number of citizens with official identification.
By continuing to broaden these efforts, robust identification systems will be a driving force for individuals to be able to join the formal economy. Today, in sub-Saharan Africa, 20% of those adults without a bank account say that lack of documentation is a factor. When individuals can access financial services, they can obtain credit and loans that help their businesses grow.
Making the voiceless heard
Official identification can also help protect families from the impact of economic and environmental shocks, as well as other crises. World Bank financing for social-safety nets in Africa amounts to $6 billion. In Mauritania, for example, the World Bank¡¯s social protection project supports the government¡¯s social registry, which includes the poorest households nationwide and is used to select beneficiaries for the national social-transfer programme. The social registry and national transfer programme serve these households, even if some members have no official identification. However, in such cases, they provide information and support to promote their enrolment into the national civil registration system.
Identification provides a foundation for other rights and gives a voice to the voiceless. ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº, through the , is committing at least $500 million to African countries striving to make progress in providing proof of identity for better service delivery and regional integration. The best news is that this investment can be paid in savings provided by the system itself. Take India, for instance, where the establishment of a unique ID number system named ensures benefits and subsidies reach only the intended beneficiaries; by doing so, it has generated enough savings to pay for its establishment within a few years.
We must find the political will to take full advantage of this transformational agenda. By investing in official identification, governments will run more efficiently and better deliver services from the beginning to the end of our lives. This foundational tool will reap benefits for our children, and our children¡¯s children, for years to come.
The Peru success story
To get the long view, looking at countries like Peru provides a roadmap of what is possible. In the 1990s, the country was emerging from years of political turmoil and economic instability. Peruvian leaders made identification a priority. Starting from an incomplete voter-registration database of adults, Peru built its with political will, a constitutional mandate and the use of biometric technology. Today, Peru has achieved nearly 99% identification of their population, including children. Because the system is built on up-to-date technology, it is interoperable: A person¡¯s identity can be authenticated across different programmes and agencies. This access to government-funded social programmes is a powerful tool to reduce poverty.
On our continent, some countries like South Africa have achieved noteworthy identification systems. In other countries, like Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Tanzania and Guinea, leaders have already begun to take advantage of technological advances that make identification more feasible and affordable. People are leveraging technology to leapfrog over old-fashioned, paper-based approaches, improving the delivery of identification services by using mobile devices to register births, biometrics to ensure uniqueness and SMS notifications to help applicants track the status of ID applications. They have embarked on ambitious plans to expand identification systems via outreach campaigns to remote and under-served populations, which will increase the number of citizens with official identification.
By continuing to broaden these efforts, robust identification systems will be a driving force for individuals to be able to join the formal economy. Today, in sub-Saharan Africa, 20% of those adults without a bank account say that lack of documentation is a factor. When individuals can access financial services, they can obtain credit and loans that help their businesses grow.
Making the voiceless heard
Official identification can also help protect families from the impact of economic and environmental shocks, as well as other crises. World Bank financing for social-safety nets in Africa amounts to $6 billion. In Mauritania, for example, the World Bank¡¯s social protection project supports the government¡¯s social registry, which includes the poorest households nationwide and is used to select beneficiaries for the national social-transfer programme. The social registry and national transfer programme serve these households, even if some members have no official identification. However, in such cases, they provide information and support to promote their enrolment into the national civil registration system.
Identification provides a foundation for other rights and gives a voice to the voiceless. ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº, through the , is committing at least $500 million to African countries striving to make progress in providing proof of identity for better service delivery and regional integration. The best news is that this investment can be paid in savings provided by the system itself. Take India, for instance, where the establishment of a unique ID number system named ensures benefits and subsidies reach only the intended beneficiaries; by doing so, it has generated enough savings to pay for its establishment within a few years.
We must find the political will to take full advantage of this transformational agenda. By investing in official identification, governments will run more efficiently and better deliver services from the beginning to the end of our lives. This foundational tool will reap benefits for our children, and our children¡¯s children, for years to come.
The Peru success story
To get the long view, looking at countries like Peru provides a roadmap of what is possible. In the 1990s, the country was emerging from years of political turmoil and economic instability. Peruvian leaders made identification a priority. Starting from an incomplete voter-registration database of adults, Peru built its with political will, a constitutional mandate and the use of biometric technology. Today, Peru has achieved nearly 99% identification of their population, including children. Because the system is built on up-to-date technology, it is interoperable: A person¡¯s identity can be authenticated across different programmes and agencies. This access to government-funded social programmes is a powerful tool to reduce poverty.
On our continent, some countries like South Africa have achieved noteworthy identification systems. In other countries, like Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Tanzania and Guinea, leaders have already begun to take advantage of technological advances that make identification more feasible and affordable. People are leveraging technology to leapfrog over old-fashioned, paper-based approaches, improving the delivery of identification services by using mobile devices to register births, biometrics to ensure uniqueness and SMS notifications to help applicants track the status of ID applications. They have embarked on ambitious plans to expand identification systems via outreach campaigns to remote and under-served populations, which will increase the number of citizens with official identification.
By continuing to broaden these efforts, robust identification systems will be a driving force for individuals to be able to join the formal economy. Today, in sub-Saharan Africa, 20% of those adults without a bank account say that lack of documentation is a factor. When individuals can access financial services, they can obtain credit and loans that help their businesses grow.
Making the voiceless heard
Official identification can also help protect families from the impact of economic and environmental shocks, as well as other crises. World Bank financing for social-safety nets in Africa amounts to $6 billion. In Mauritania, for example, the World Bank¡¯s social protection project supports the government¡¯s social registry, which includes the poorest households nationwide and is used to select beneficiaries for the national social-transfer programme. The social registry and national transfer programme serve these households, even if some members have no official identification. However, in such cases, they provide information and support to promote their enrolment into the national civil registration system.
Identification provides a foundation for other rights and gives a voice to the voiceless. ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº, through the , is committing at least $500 million to African countries striving to make progress in providing proof of identity for better service delivery and regional integration. The best news is that this investment can be paid in savings provided by the system itself. Take India, for instance, where the establishment of a unique ID number system named ensures benefits and subsidies reach only the intended beneficiaries; by doing so, it has generated enough savings to pay for its establishment within a few years.
We must find the political will to take full advantage of this transformational agenda. By investing in official identification, governments will run more efficiently and better deliver services from the beginning to the end of our lives. This foundational tool will reap benefits for our children, and our children¡¯s children, for years to come.
The Peru success story
To get the long view, looking at countries like Peru provides a roadmap of what is possible. In the 1990s, the country was emerging from years of political turmoil and economic instability. Peruvian leaders made identification a priority. Starting from an incomplete voter-registration database of adults, Peru built its with political will, a constitutional mandate and the use of biometric technology. Today, Peru has achieved nearly 99% identification of their population, including children. Because the system is built on up-to-date technology, it is interoperable: A person¡¯s identity can be authenticated across different programmes and agencies. This access to government-funded social programmes is a powerful tool to reduce poverty.
On our continent, some countries like South Africa have achieved noteworthy identification systems. In other countries, like Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Tanzania and Guinea, leaders have already begun to take advantage of technological advances that make identification more feasible and affordable. People are leveraging technology to leapfrog over old-fashioned, paper-based approaches, improving the delivery of identification services by using mobile devices to register births, biometrics to ensure uniqueness and SMS notifications to help applicants track the status of ID applications. They have embarked on ambitious plans to expand identification systems via outreach campaigns to remote and under-served populations, which will increase the number of citizens with official identification.
By continuing to broaden these efforts, robust identification systems will be a driving force for individuals to be able to join the formal economy. Today, in sub-Saharan Africa, 20% of those adults without a bank account say that lack of documentation is a factor. When individuals can access financial services, they can obtain credit and loans that help their businesses grow.
Making the voiceless heard
Official identification can also help protect families from the impact of economic and environmental shocks, as well as other crises. World Bank financing for social-safety nets in Africa amounts to $6 billion. In Mauritania, for example, the World Bank¡¯s social protection project supports the government¡¯s social registry, which includes the poorest households nationwide and is used to select beneficiaries for the national social-transfer programme. The social registry and national transfer programme serve these households, even if some members have no official identification. However, in such cases, they provide information and support to promote their enrolment into the national civil registration system.
Identification provides a foundation for other rights and gives a voice to the voiceless. ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº, through the , is committing at least $500 million to African countries striving to make progress in providing proof of identity for better service delivery and regional integration. The best news is that this investment can be paid in savings provided by the system itself. Take India, for instance, where the establishment of a unique ID number system named ensures benefits and subsidies reach only the intended beneficiaries; by doing so, it has generated enough savings to pay for its establishment within a few years.
We must find the political will to take full advantage of this transformational agenda. By investing in official identification, governments will run more efficiently and better deliver services from the beginning to the end of our lives. This foundational tool will reap benefits for our children, and our children¡¯s children, for years to come.
The Peru success story
To get the long view, looking at countries like Peru provides a roadmap of what is possible. In the 1990s, the country was emerging from years of political turmoil and economic instability. Peruvian leaders made identification a priority. Starting from an incomplete voter-registration database of adults, Peru built its with political will, a constitutional mandate and the use of biometric technology. Today, Peru has achieved nearly 99% identification of their population, including children. Because the system is built on up-to-date technology, it is interoperable: A person¡¯s identity can be authenticated across different programmes and agencies. This access to government-funded social programmes is a powerful tool to reduce poverty.
On our continent, some countries like South Africa have achieved noteworthy identification systems. In other countries, like Ghana, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Tanzania and Guinea, leaders have already begun to take advantage of technological advances that make identification more feasible and affordable. People are leveraging technology to leapfrog over old-fashioned, paper-based approaches, improving the delivery of identification services by using mobile devices to register births, biometrics to ensure uniqueness and SMS notifications to help applicants track the status of ID applications. They have embarked on ambitious plans to expand identification systems via outreach campaigns to remote and under-served populations, which will increase the number of citizens with official identification.
By continuing to broaden these efforts, robust identification systems will be a driving force for individuals to be able to join the formal economy. Today, in sub-Saharan Africa, 20% of those adults without a bank account say that lack of documentation is a factor. When individuals can access financial services, they can obtain credit and loans that help their businesses grow.
Making the voiceless heard
Official identification can also help protect families from the impact of economic and environmental shocks, as well as other crises. World Bank financing for social-safety nets in Africa amounts to $6 billion. In Mauritania, for example, the World Bank¡¯s social protection project supports the government¡¯s social registry, which includes the poorest households nationwide and is used to select beneficiaries for the national social-transfer programme. The social registry and national transfer programme serve these households, even if some members have no official identification. However, in such cases, they provide information and support to promote their enrolment into the national civil registration system.
Identification provides a foundation for other rights and gives a voice to the voiceless. ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº, through the , is committing at least $500 million to African countries striving to make progress in providing proof of identity for better service delivery and regional integration. The best news is that this investment can be paid in savings provided by the system itself. Take India, for instance, where the establishment of a unique ID number system named ensures benefits and subsidies reach only the intended beneficiaries; by doing so, it has generated enough savings to pay for its establishment within a few years.
We must find the political will to take full advantage of this transformational agenda. By investing in official identification, governments will run more efficiently and better deliver services from the beginning to the end of our lives. This foundational tool will reap benefits for our children, and our children¡¯s children, for years to come.