ID+: Leaving No One Behind
Despite decades of strong economic growth efforts in West Africa (Niger, Benin) , workers and residents especially in the informal sector still face significant inequalities that have resulted in persistent low human development e.g. life expectancy, education, and per capita income among the most marginalized groups, particularly those in lower castes.
ID+ –an online biometric-based identity system designed to empower citizens with a unique identity number and a digital platform through which identities can be authenticated easy-reaching even the most excluded residents and those least likely to possess an official identity seeks to advance identification for all in order to help facilitate the delivery of services such as social protection, financial inclusion, healthcare, humanitarian assistance and a myriad of government subsidies with ease to the most vulnerable groups in low-income developing countries thus serving as a key enabler for eradicating poverty and for achieving a broad range of development outcomes.
Of the one billion people in developing countries who don’t have proof to assert who they say they are, 40% of Sub-Saharan Africa —approximately 502 million people–lack official proof of identification and, consequently, face significant barriers to accessing critical social safety net services.
Identity is a core enabler for a wide range of services, especially payments, banking, government services and effectively all services requiring strong authentication of the user. As the underlying complexity of digital services grows, and digital fraud escalates, identity is increasingly being recognised as key to ensuring secure, validated communications and transactions across a wide range of sectors.
But without a secure way to assert and verify her identity, a person may be unable to open bank account, register a Simcard, vote, access education, insurance benefits or healthcare, receive a pension payment, or file official petitions in court and other social protection services especially for the informal sector workers.
Reciprocally, governments also struggle to authenticate and deliver services to the unregistered unidentified and the last mile rural
dwellers (World Bank).
We therefore intend to pilot an inclusive/interoperable ID system providing a unique identity number and a digital platform through which identities can easily be authenticated.

An inclusive interoperable foundational ID number linked with a beneficiary's bank account or mobile money account number can provide government-to-person (G2P) payments, and biometrically identify and authenticate residents that are deemed to be eligible for government subsidies. This system has capacity to benefit both the governments by saving money wasted through leakages during direct benefit transfers and the extension of social safety net services to workers in the informal economy especially those in agricultural, construction, domestic services, self-employed workers/own-account workers, in micro and small enterprises and migrants. It offers new levers to governments in low-income developing countries to implement a wide range of policies and programs, to increase effectiveness and accountability, and also to include many who have been effectively shut out whether through lack of recognition, high transactions costs, or the inability to ensure that payments or other services are delivered accurately, to the right person, and at the right time.
The platform also empowers mobile network operators and other private sector organizations to leverage the unique ID number to provide a range of value-adding services in a highly cost-effective way–reducing the cost of the Know-Your- Customer (KYC) process and significantly lowering the overall cost of customer acquisition.
- Deploying features that use regionally interoperable foundational ID systems and can be accessed across borders, network providers, and languages — allowing workers to receive services and make contributions or withdrawals regardless of origin or location
This Solution proposes an robust and inclusive foundational ID system that leverages a unique, regionally interoperable ID number to enable and advance identification for all by linking financial institutions and mobile money and other social information systems to facilitate delivery of inclusive services that are not based on a standard employment contract, and yet are flexible across borders e.g. financial services, social insurance healthcare, education, humanitarian assistance, government-to-person and P2G payments for the missing middle regardless of origin or current location–thus serving as a key enabler for eradicating poverty and for achieving a broad range of development outcomes.
- Idea: A plan or concept by an individual or organization.

Founder & CEO