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T N Ninan: Citizen No. 473879621?
The issue of unique ID cards can cause operational nightmares and Mr Nilekani should not expect a smooth ride
T N Ninan / New Delhi Jun 27, 2009, 00:52 IST

Nandan Nilekani virtually wrote himself a new job when he wrote Imagining India. On pages 367-371, he went into the business of issuing a unique identity card to all citizens—a project that has now been handed over to him, to general approval about a great choice having been made. With a full measure of realism about what he is getting into, Mr Nilekani terms the project a “hairy” business; and in his book (excerpted on the facing page), he gives some idea why. Among other things, he quotes an unnamed academic as saying that the number of BPL (Below the Poverty Line) cards circulating in Karnataka exceeds the total population of the state, let alone the BPL population. The labour ministry in New Delhi will endorse that: when it began issuing cards for health insurance in the national capital, it found that more than half the BPL cards in the city were bogus. Even otherwise, it is easy to see how difficult the business can be, when you have to weed out illegal Bangladeshi immigrants from among genuine citizens.

The two standard arguments in favour of such a card (and there are more in Imagining India) are national security/immigration, and preventing fraud when it comes to government benefit programmes. The arguments become stronger when many kinds of cards are being issued in any case (there are 65 million kisan credit cards in existence, and 97 million BPL cards—though there are only 58 million BPL families), so it makes sense to have a common card with multiple uses, and a common database. But the objectives are served only if the card-issuing process is foolproof, whereas many people’s experience with something as simple as the election card is less than satisfactory.

In many democracies, there is significant opposition to the idea of such a card, because of privacy and civil liberties concerns. That is in part because ID systems were often adopted first by authoritarian governments. The countries of Western Europe have since built in many safeguards and this will be one of the issues to be resolved in India; outside of Europe, there are few significant countries that have such a card system. The US is by law prevented from issuing a national ID card, Australia gave up the idea after adopting it, as did some Asian countries, and China has now begun to go down this path—but has given up the idea of incorporating biometric systems.

To understand the risks, look at Britain, which decided in 2005 to issue all citizens a unique ID card. Four years later, the first cards to ordinary citizens are yet to be issued, and this will not be done for another couple of years. With all of some 50 million citizens to be covered, the cost is forbidding, and said to be over five billion pounds (Rs 40,000 crore). So the government has reduced the amount of data to be stored; out go iris scans, for instance. To add to the uncertainty, the Tories threaten to kill the project if they come to power.

India has one clear advantage, in that its tech companies can probably work out a card-issuing system that is truly low-cost. But there will be a trade-off between cost and utility; the more data you store on the card, the greater its usefulness, and the higher also its cost. The bigger challenge is likely to be the organisational one; with an imperfect administration, and the extent of illegal immigration from Bangladesh, not to mention the open border with Nepal, the issue of cards that assume citizenship can cause operational nightmares. In short, Mr Nilekani should not expect a smooth ride.

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Latest Messages
Posted by: vkannan
Sorry, but Indian IT companies and their fantastic IT wont solve anything. It is the process and implementation. In a country that still has bad service in Banks that have invested heavily in IT, and it takes 2 months for a one page KYC to get "registered" I despair. I would rather spend the money fraud-proofing the processes with embedded controls, raising the number of judges and their pay, creating an environment where people have pride in their profession and processes are transparent and tamper proof than issuing yet another card. There are no 'magic' solutions in this world. Every inch of progress requires hard work. If we dont change our mentality first, we may well find from the new ID that we have 3 billion citizens....rather like the BPL.
Posted by: vkannan
Obviously, it is easier to start a new project than tackle the problems we do have. If there are a lot of fake IDs (the BPL card example), we dont want to tackle that. That is too difficult for us. Instead, we want to create yet another ID. Easier to ignore the fundamental structural problems we have in the implemantation of, well, anything ! Good show, I think, as this will create further opportunities for the people who have experience in bringing the BPL Cards to the state that they are in now. Check this link out for the US Real ID experience http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id=feds-push-new-national-id-program-a-2009-09-09
Posted by: anant
Is it correct that the US does not issue a social security card? The US government describes here (https://www.socialsecurity.gov/online/ss-5.html)the procedure to get a card, and talks about its benefits elsewhere.
Posted by: Maliwal
Congress Bhompus like Mr Ninan will never mention it (though that never hesitate doing so if the shoe is on other leg) that we would have had ID cards long time ago (and perhaps saved billions of rupees in cheating in public subsidies) but for the oppositon by Congress and its allies when NDA had proposed National ID Card scheme. Of course, we will never hear that on the pages of BS; only bhajans of Sonia-Congress-Manmohan and damning of BJP / CPM are allowed.
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