“My Number”: Portal to a Digital Society

Politics Economy Society

Morinobu Shigeki [Profile]

Under Japan’s new My Number national identification system, set to go into effect next January, each registered resident is being assigned a unique lifetime ID number to facilitate integrated management of taxpayer information and prevent tax and welfare fraud. The author, an expert in national ID systems worldwide, urges the Japanese to overcome their suspicions and tap into the system’s vast potential for high-tech convenience and efficiency.

Europe’s Diverse National ID Systems

To place the new My Number system in a broader international context, let us take a moment to look at the use of similar systems in Western Europe.

The industrialized country that has made the most extensive use of national identification numbers is Sweden, which introduced Personal Identity Numbers in 1947. The numbers, issued by the Swedish Tax Agency, are used by various government authorities to track and share resident registration information. They are also used in the private sector. For example, for marketing purposes, businesses can pay the government for information on individuals living in a particular area, including their names, addresses, and even income.

Germany is at the opposite end of the spectrum. Among Germans, any discussion of national identification numbers tends to conjure up images of the numbers the Nazis tattooed on the arms of Jews and other concentration camp inmates. As a result, popular opposition has blocked the adoption of a unified national identification system, and taxpayer ID numbers are used for tax purposes only.

The Netherlands stands roughly midway between these two extremes. In 2007, the Netherlands instituted a Citizen Service Number, which took the place of the so-called SoFi (social security and financial) number. Since then, amid ongoing public debate, use of the number has expanded year by year, and today it is used for a wide range of administrative purposes.

As these examples suggest, historical and other factors have determined the use of national identification numbers, resulting in considerable variation from one country to the next. In Japan, the government is starting small, but during the next three years it hopes to expand the numbers’ use to five administrative areas, including passports, family registries, and health insurance.

Fairer and Simpler Tax Administration

Under separate legislation, meanwhile, financial institutions will begin attaching My Number IDs to deposit accounts in 2018. Although depositors will not be legally required to provide their IDs to institutions at the outset, eventually all deposit accounts will have to be associated with a My Number ID. This is expected to become a potent tool for tax enforcement.

Once employers start making use of the ID numbers in January, tax administrators will have a simple means of tracing employment income subject to withholding tax. But business income is a different matter. The only way a national ID system could be used to keep tabs on sales by a sole proprietor, for example, would be to require customers to report all their purchases to tax authorities using the store’s identification number—hardly a practical solution. Nor are ID numbers particularly useful in preventing sole proprietors or independent contractors from evading taxes by claiming personal expenditures as business expenses. But the use of My Number to identify the holders of financial accounts should create a major deterrent to tax evasion by helping tax administrators trace deposits to their depositors.

From the standpoint of taxpayer convenience, the new system could also pave the way for easy tax filing with the aid of pre-filled tax forms. In Europe, this service is typically provided by tax agencies, which use the wage and withholding information reported by employers to fill in taxpayers’ tax forms and then send the forms to taxpayers for verification and correction as necessary. The scheme currently under study by Japanese authorities would make use of My Portal, which would store such information as wages, pension and health insurance premiums, and other deductible expenses and automatically transfer it to the appropriate tax forms for easy electronic filing.

Where healthcare is concerned, privacy concerns have sparked considerable opposition to the use of the ID numbers to track patients and medical information. However, not all healthcare information is privacy-sensitive. Unlike medical records, payment records raise relatively few privacy concerns, and linking them to My Number would greatly simplify their management for purposes of tax deductions. A mechanism for transmitting healthcare payment information to My Portal would greatly enhance the system’s usefulness to ordinary citizens.

Ticket to Economic Vitality

As the Japanese population ages and the productive population dwindles, the economy is groaning under the weight of rising healthcare and social security costs. One key to restoring the nation’s economic vitality under these conditions is the deployment of advanced information and communication technology at every level. In this context, the My Number system is much more than a means of tracking taxpayers and social security recipients. It is the portal to an efficient, vital, digital society.

By making use of all three components of this new social infrastructure—My Number IDs, personal number cards, and My Portal—citizens and residents of Japan will benefit first of all by more efficient delivery of government services at the national and local level, and later by the convenience of one-stop shopping combining a wide array of public- and private-sector services. This infrastructure will in turn open up a host of new business opportunities. We will need to pool our private and public expertise henceforth to ensure that the system functions safely and effectively and makes good on its promise of greater economic and social vitality.

(Originally written in Japanese and published on October 28, 2015. Banner photo: Sample design of a “personal number card,” to be issued to residents on request under the new My Number social security and tax identification system. Each photo ID, imprinted with the holder’s 12-digit number and incorporating advanced chip technology, could eventually take the place of separate health insurance and other cards. © Jiji.)

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social security my number national ID number system tax administration personal number cards healthcare information

Morinobu ShigekiView article list

Senior Fellow, Tokyo Foundation. Born in Hiroshima in 1950. After earning a law degree from Kyoto University in 1973, joined the Ministry of Finance. Served as head of the Co-ordination Division, Tax Bureau; director-general of Tokyo Customs; and president of MOF’s Policy Research Institute. Holds an LLD in tax law. Is the author of many books, including Nihon no zeisei: Nani ga mondai ka (Flaws in Japan’s Tax System) and Shōhizei: Jōshiki no uso (Common Misconceptions about the Consumption Tax).

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