Tax Identification Numbers (TINs) have played a crucial role in identifying taxpayers, enabling the tax administration’s various departments to consolidate their information, and collect information from third-parties to independently verify taxpayer assessments. However, recent years have seen the increasing prominence of national IDs serving the whole-of-government. IDs also appear to have proliferated with the internet and general digitalization, with most organizations requiring some type of unique identifier to manage communications and payments.

Join us online for this event which will highlights key insights from the forthcoming World Bank-ICTD publication on TINs and brings together tax officials, academics, and international development experts to discuss some of the key opportunities and challenges facing tax administrations in managing identities as part of an ever larger data ecosystem.

We are interested exploring the following questions:

  • What are the must-get-right decisions facing tax administrations in recalibrating their TIN policy?
  • Should Tax Administrations replace TINs with national IDs?
  • Who are the tax administration’s key partners in expanding and improving the TIN ecosystem?
  • How have tax administrations in practice gone about building a legal framework to expand data sharing?
  • What results are tax administrations experiencing from the expanded use of TIN and data-interoperability – and what lies ahead?

Speakers

  • Anders Hjorth Agerskov, World Bank
  • Celeste Scarpini, ICTD
  • Joy Ndubai, African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF)
  • Sintayehu Mitiku, Tax Transformation Programme (TTP)
  • Gaute Solheim, Norwegian Tax Administration

The webinar will be moderated by Fabrizio Santoro, ICTD.

Watch the livestream

Event Details
Past Event
Date
11 March 2025
Time
-

Fabrizio Santoro

Fabrizio is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies, and the Research Lead for the second component of the ICTD's DIGITAX Research Programme. His main research interests relate to governance, public finance, and taxation, with a strong focus on impact evaluation methodologies and statistical analysis. He holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Sussex.

Celeste Scarpini

Celeste Scarpini is a Research Officer at the ICTD, and a PhD student at the Department of Economics, University of Sussex. Her main research interests relate to tax administration in sub-Saharan Africa, from technology adoption to data management and revenue collection strategies.