Jamaica Gleaner

Be practical with digital solutions

-

THE EDITOR, Madam:

NADINE BARRETT-MAITLAND, in a letter to the editor, questioned if Jamaica is ready for digitalisa­tion. We know that digitalisa­tion is dependent on reliable systems, technology and trust. Take, for instance, the national identifica­tion system (NIDS); it has been almost seven years since we first heard of plans to implement it. The controvers­ial system with biometric data was supposed to be mandatory, with punitive fines for non-compliance. NIDS was stalled by the courts, which ruled that elements of the law were unconstitu­tional. NIDS was revised and will now be voluntary, although it will obviously be enforced for some groups. The public was informed that J$1.96 billion was allocated in the current Budget; we anxiously await the outcomes.

NIDS is based on a national ID system used in Estonia, a country with about half of Jamaica’s population, yet it generates three times our gross domestic product. We can’t copy systems that work in these places and expect the same outcomes, without considerat­ion for our many difference­s, some of which are cultural. I personally have no problem with a national identity system to facilitate improving government services and efficienci­es; my argument has always been that it would be better to upgrade tax registrati­on number (TRN) system, which is already in place and working, and link the TRN to other documents to i mprove efficienci­es in government agencies especially. Most Jamaicans have a TRN, it is required for government services and banking. It makes no sense to have TRN existing alongside NIDS; I believe NIDS will also capture TRN, which is a duplicatio­n of systems.

In the USA and Canada, unique numbers are assigned to individual­s for social identity, and this drives social services, taxation, photo IDs, banking, etc. This is how we should’ve approached national identity – to follow individual­s until they die. We already have several forms of renewable photo IDs. I am thinking about elderly pensioners, who must submit quarterly life certificat­es signed by a justice of the peace or qualifying officer to show that the person is still alive, otherwise pensions will abruptly stop, causing inconvenie­nce. Many pensioners are poor, some are incapacita­ted and live in remote areas. The TRN captured on a death certificat­e should be enough to flag updates to other systems. The Government says that NIDS will be the solution to eliminate pension certificat­es, but this means that NIDS will be mandatory for pensioners – even if it is voluntary for others – an extra step for seniors, considerin­g that NIDS is renewable every few years.

Digitalisa­tion and modernisat­ion is the way forward, but we must be practical with solutions to problems and look for simple, costeffect­ive methods which are in line with budget constraint­s.

P. CHIN chin_p@yahoo.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica