Individual Number

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Individual Number (個人番号, kojin bangō), also known as My Number (マイナンバー, mai nambā), is a 12-digit ID number issued to all citizens and residents of Japan (including foreign residents in Japan) used for taxation, social security and disaster response purposes. The numbers were first issued in late 2015.[1][2][3]

There are pros and cons regarding efficiency when using both Basic Resident Registers Network and  [ja].[4]

Promotional campaign[]

To advertise the system's introduction the Japanese government employed actress Aya Ueto and created a mascot character name "Maina-chan". [1]

Fraud[]

The first fraud related to the system occurred when an elderly woman in the Kantō region was defrauded of several million yen.[5]

Mainapoint[]

The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications is promoting a cashless payment card called Mainapoint (マイナポイント) linked to an individual's My Number.[6] It is based on the My Key Platform, which had existed since 2017 but had failed to attract the population's interest.[7]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Osaki, Tomohiro Ready or not, government will soon have your My Number September 20, 2015 The Japan Times Retrieved October 6, 2015
  2. ^ The Social Security and Tax Number system Cabinet Secretariat Retrieved October 6, 2015
  3. ^ Japan introducing “My Number” system, some information Austrian Business Council Retrieved October 6, 2015
  4. ^ (水町 2017), p. 260 "住民基本台帳ネットワークシステムと番号制度が別個に併存していることが効率的かというと、そこは賛否が分かれるであろう。"
  5. ^ Woman in her 70s first confirmed victim of My Number-related fraud October 7, 2015 The Japan Times Retrieved October 7, 2015
  6. ^ https://mynumbercard.point.soumu.go.jp/
  7. ^ "Generate Random Social Security Numbers".
  • 水町, 雅子 (2017-11-15). 逐条解説マイナンバー法 (1st. ed.). Kayaba-cho, Nipponbashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Japan: Shojihomu Co., Ltd. ISBN 978-4-7857-2567-9.

External links[]

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