This is a number that is on the top of a
carb box on a P200 Vespa, on the frame near the serial number, on the
frame of a Lambretta, on Vespa exhausts, and on the horns but it has
nothing to do with the serial number. It stands for "Ispettorato
Generale Motorizzazione", which translates to "DMV General
Inspectorate". The "Motorizzazione" (whose extended name is
"Motorizzazione Civile e Trasporti in Concessione", "Civilian Motoring
and Public Transport Licenses (dept.)" is the equivalent of the DMV.
It's a branch of the Minister of Infrastructures and Public
transportation, and the IGM is the office that certifies a vehicle as
street legal. Every motorized vehicle must be street legal in Italy.
Not only the vehicle, but its most important parts too, such as engine,
exhaust system, carbs, lights, light glasses, and so on. In Italy if
your combination isn't a legal one, the vehicle can be impounded and
shouldn't pass periodic service checks, thus losing street legal state.
In America it is often mistaken by
authorities as the serial number and even written down on the title.