sherbert wrote on Mar 9
th, 2011 at 6:54pm:
....and so does you National Insurance number
This is presumably a reference to the age-old debate about where the dividing line between what is presently DWP and HMRC should fall.
The former Contributions Agency (part of DWP) was passed over to "Inland Revenue" (now part of HMRC), although DWP agencies still conduct part of the NI number application process and administer contribution-based benefits. The current hot debate is over "tax credits" which, as means-tested benefits, should perhaps be handled alongside the other DWP benefits agencies, rather than by HMRC, which is focused on collecting money rather than distributing it.
Had the Identity Register project gone ahead then it is likely that the NI number would have eventually ceased to occupy its current place as the primary personal identifying reference for some government agencies. Happily, we can leave the "Identity and Passport Service", an executive agency of the Home Office, out of the picture. Even though it retains its name, and 0300 numbers, it has lost its nominal primary function. We still have Passport numbers, NHS numbers, Driver numbers and many other references by which government agencies identify us.
For me, there is sadly little difference between DWP and HMRC. Although the former uses "free to caller" 0800 numbers for lengthy initial application calls, both have an exclusive 0845 numbering policy for enquiries. Attempts to undermine this do however continue (
see this weighty attempt).