I disagree somewhat about the waste of time, the requirement for independent ID tests goes back to pharmacopoeia from early last century - long before HPLC tests. If you think modern ones are tedious, try sodium fusion and group separation.
Note that ID tests are usually part of a monograph, and may be used without other tests ( assay, related substances etc. ) , eg for Inwards good testing by downstream formulators etc.,
As a QC analyst, I had several chemicals fail pharmacopial ID tests, and even had raw materials rejected because their labelling/quality was incorrect - as detected by the ID tests, and later confirmed by further work.
Published pharmacopoeia monographs often require at least two discrete ID tests from a selection of several ( eg "one ID test from A or D, and one from B, C, E "), In a few monographs, specific assay tests ( eg GC FAMEs ) may also be the only required acceptable ID.
You haven't said what stage of the pharmaceutical industry you are playing in, but let's investigate a few scenarios. I'm ignoring the requirement that as you developed your production, you should have also validated the quality procedures of manufacturing to ensure they met ICH Q-series requirements.
You're synthesizing an API. You hope you have made 2-OH- gobblydegook, but if you didn't, you may have made 2,4-diOH-gobblydegook, which could have very similar HPLC chromatographic properties ( give acceptable assay ), or made two components - one with double the chromophore, 2-OH-digobblydegook, and the other without the chromophore, 2-OH-degook. You're unlikely to have made 2-0H-jargon, which would have different retention times.
Your producing raw materials, the factory produces antibiotics ( sulphonamides, penicillins, or tetracyclines, ), and holds stocks of product in stores. Your ID tests must discriminate potential mislabelling and cross-contamination. The HPLC conditions may not resolve or detect all the potential contaminants. The ICH Quality guides allow customers to accept your CoA data as one of the ID tests, so quality testing has to be robust.
You're formulating products. Your inwards good have all the raw materials that meet compendial standards. You have to confirm that each container ( statistical sampling ) is true to label. ID tests alone may be used - without the assay. You can even use the supplier's CoA as one ID, provided their quality have been audited by your quality people.
ID tests serve a very specific role in a monograph, and that role is used at different stages in drug manufacture. You could justify not performing ID tests for in-house use, but if you are using compendial monographs, you have to comply with their requirements, and if you are making APIs for others to use, you still have to confirm that the ID tests alone are adequate for each batch of product.
If all systems were perfect, there would be no need for any ID testing, the industry would just use the original CoA, but almost all processes involve humans...
Please keep having fun,
Bruce Hamilton