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Towards European electronic identity: A blueprint for a secure pan-European digital identity

Author

Listed:
  • Wagner, Eric

    (Group Product Owner Compliance Advanced Analytics, Erste Group Bank AG, Austria)

  • Mannino, Matteo

    (Senior Policy Adviser, Digital Finance and Innovation at a ESBG (European Savings and Retail Banking Group), Belgium)

  • Lauer, Oliver

    (Consultant for FinTech and Digital Identity, DSGV (Deutsche Sparkassen- und Giroverband), Germany)

Abstract

As cross-border digital services are expected to grow, a secure electronic identification will be a cornerstone of the digital economy. Besides some existing solutions at the member states level, the European Union (EU) is still struggling to reach a harmonised, comprehensive approach towards digital identification. The combination of a fragmented regulatory framework and an incoherent infrastructure has created a barrier to successful emergence of industry-led use cases. The European digital identity wallet (DIW) proposal announced by the European Commission on 3rd June, 2021, sets the bar high for an extension of the electronic IDentification, Authentication and trust Services (eIDAS) framework that might generate interoperable solutions. The substance of the actual solutions adopted by the members states, however, will much depend on the negotiations in the coming months between the private sector, member states and EU co-legislators. This paper develops a blueprint for a European digital identity in the financial services sector, which should provide sufficient security against identity thefts while protecting against synthetic identities. To this aim, a clear definition of standards is needed to provide portability, interoperability and sufficient data protection and privacy. The paper offers a comprehensive overview of both the necessary requirements and the major components for the design of a future pan-European e-ID (EUid), including know your customer attributes and their respective levels of assurance (LoAs). Furthermore, it outlines the prerequisites for designing authentication. The EUid solution should be founded on a robust trust framework, based on attributes provided and directly verifiable by their respective trusted issuers. The conclusions examine the potential role of the banking sector. Although EU regulators see the private sector as well placed to act as an identity provider for private individuals and legal entities, this alone would not guarantee a high LoA. Could banks think of a successful EUid business model, considering the rising number of national KYC utilities for corporates? A possible solution would be minimising costs via the creation of a common pan-European identity infrastructure centred around a public–private partnership, including actors from different industries.

Suggested Citation

  • Wagner, Eric & Mannino, Matteo & Lauer, Oliver, 2021. "Towards European electronic identity: A blueprint for a secure pan-European digital identity," Journal of Financial Compliance, Henry Stewart Publications, vol. 5(2), pages 162-188, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:aza:jfc000:y:2021:v:5:i:2:p:162-188
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    More about this item

    Keywords

    EUid; pan-European e-ID; digital identity; wallet; secure infrastructure; authentication; KYC;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • G2 - Financial Economics - - Financial Institutions and Services
    • E5 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit
    • K2 - Law and Economics - - Regulation and Business Law

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