Compliance & Regulation

FATF publishes Guidance on Digital ID

The FATF (Financial Action Task Force) have published guidance on digital ID, quoting the fact that the number of digital transactions are growing at an estimated 12.7 % annually as providing the need for the guidance to be released.

By 2022, according to a FATF release, an estimated 60% of global GDP will be digitised.

In any financial transaction, knowing your customer is essential to ensure that the funds involved are not linked with crime and terrorism.  However, in a digital context, traditional verification tools do not apply. The FATF has developed guidance that will help governments, financial institutions, virtual asset service providers and other regulated entities determine whether a digital ID is appropriate for use for customer due diligence.

Reliable digital ID can make it easier, cheaper and more secure to identify individuals in the financial sector, according to the FATF. It can also help with transaction monitoring requirements and minimise weaknesses in human control measures.

Digital ID systems are evolving rapidly.  To determine whether a digital ID is suitable, governments, financial institutions and other stakeholders should:

  1. Understand the assurance levels of the digital ID system’s technology, architecture and governance
  2. Given its assurance levels, determine whether it is appropriately reliable, independent in light of potential risks that it is used to facilitate illicit finance

With 1.7 billion unbanked adults worldwide and 26% of them citing lack of documentation as the primary barrier, digital ID offers another important benefit.   A robust digital ID can allow individuals without a traditional identification to nonetheless have a robust form of identification to access financial services and improve financial inclusion.

The Guidance on Digital ID release by the FATF can be found HERE.