Fiercely Independent News & Opinion

SARS joins Schreiber’s push for single digital identity system

by | Nov 15, 2024

The new form of ID tracking will allow a single portal through which to surveil all economic and institutional behaviours of any citizen
Cape Independent news, Western Cape politics, Cape of Good Hope current affairs, conservative news South Africa, local autonomy Cape, decentralisation Western Cape, Cape conservative opinion, South Africa conservative media, Western Cape news, Cape Town politics, conservative Cape news, local governance Cape, Western Cape opinion articles, Cape autonomy movement, South Africa decentralisation news

SHARE POST:

✅ Link Copied

South Africa is making strides towards a fully digitised economy, with plans to implement unique digital identities for citizens and to introduce instant visas. The South African Revenue Service (SARS), the Reserve Bank, and the Department of Home Affairs are leading this effort, aiming to simplify record-keeping and enhance surveillance across the economy.

Edward Kieswetter, head of SARS, highlighted the challenges posed by the current system, where South Africans are assigned multiple identifiers for different purposes—tax, healthcare, and business registration—creating inefficiencies and potential for fraud. The absence of a unified digital identity, he argued, allows for exploitation, such as individuals collecting both wages and social grants without detection.

The government’s push for a single digital identity aims to streamline this fragmented system, allowing a more transparent, centralised platform for tracking citizens’ economic and institutional activities. The intention is to create a universal window for surveillance, improving the government’s ability to monitor and manage the population’s engagement with formal structures.

Furthering the digital transformation, SARS is also collaborating with Home Affairs to issue instant visas, leveraging existing technology already capable of processing tax assessments in less than five seconds. Kieswetter explained that the technology is available and a proof of concept for instant visas is in development.

Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber, who unveiled a five-year strategic plan for digital transformation in September, has long been an advocate of digitisation, influenced by the ideas of Tony Blair and other Fabian thinkers. The department is now focusing on embedding digital technologies and fostering inter-agency collaboration to enhance efficiency.

Though the digital transformation agenda is still in its early stages, with much of the planning process still ongoing, the push for a unified, surveillance-driven digital infrastructure reflects a broader trend towards increasing governmental control and oversight, with the potential to significantly reshape South Africa’s administrative landscape.

0 0 votes
Rate this article

Independent news and opinion articles with a focus on the Western Cape, written for a more conservative audience – the silent majority with good old common sense.

Interested in joining the movement? Find ways to get involved

GET NOTIFIED FOR NEW CONTENT

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Read the good stuff…