Jamaica Gleaner

NIDS debt concerns Opposition

- Brian Walker/Staff Reporter

OPPOSITION SPOKESMAN for Finance Mark Golding raised concerns about the economic implicatio­ns of the debt that will be incurred from the roll-out of the National I dentificat­ion System (NIDS) as Parliament’s Standing Finance Committee examined the Estimates of Expenditur­e for 2018-2019 on Thursday.

The NIDS is expected to cost more than $8.8 billion over six fiscal years, and it is designed to create a reliable and centralise­d database to identify Jamaican citizens and improve security and access to government services.

Golding asked, “Of that $8.825 billion, $8.5 billion of it is being borrowed from the Inter American Developmen­t Bank. Has an independen­t assessment of the economic impact of that expenditur­e been done?”

103 PER CENT RATE OF RETURN

Minister of Finance and the Public Ser vice Audley Shaw explained, “An assessment of the NIDS was done i n September 2017, and the economic rate of return is 103 per cent if approximat­ely 70 per cent of the population is enrolled, and these returns are expected to be seen after three years of implementa­tion.”

When quizzed about the source of that projection, the minister disclosed that it was done from baseline data that was carried out by a local consultant. He added that the Public Investment Management Secretaria­t would have done an assessment of the loan and expenditur­e.

The NIDS bill was passed in both houses of Parliament last November despite outcry from church and civil society groups regarding what they described as the Government’s lack of consultati­on. A pilot project involving public sector workers is set to be rolled out in January 2019.

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