The End of Prosperity: Can Islamic Finance Help?

By Mahomed Shoaib Omar (Specialist Corporate & Islamic Finance Attorney)
POSTED: 21 DHUL HIJJAH 1429, 20 DECEMBER 2008

The meltdown of the global financial system has raised profound questions of 
its fundamental structural reform.  The downward spiral in the US and Western 
Europe is described by financial experts as deleveraging : the forced reduction 
of accumulated debt by households and financial institutions.  As more assets 
get dumped into the market, prices are driven down further, which in turn 
necessitates more deleveraging.  This vicious cycle has gained such momentum 
that even the massive bailout packages may not be sufficient to stop it.  The 
bursting of the debt-fuelled property bubble in the US, together with the 
crippling losses suffered by banks, has set in motion a chain-reaction that, in 
a worst-case scenario, (according to Prof Niall Ferguson of Harvard) could lead 
to a 21st century version of the Great Depression (1).
The immediate cause of the current financial crisis appears to be the excessive 
and imprudent lending by banks (2).  This in turn is attributed to the 
unbridled power of private bankers to create money out of nothing, and then to 
loan this bank-created money on interest  (described as fractional reserve 
banking).  In this present monetary framework, money is traded as a commodity, 
instead of performing its true function of operating as a medium of exchange.  
This system favours the rich against the industrious poor.  Despite the fact 
that deposits are sourced from a broad cross- section of the society, their 
benefit goes mainly to the rich.  James Robertson in “Transforming Economic 
Life”(3) states that:

“Today’s money and finance system is unfair, ecologically destructive and 
economically inefficient.  The money – must – grow imperative … skews economic 
effort towards money out of money, and against providing real services and 
goods”.

A substantial proportion of this privately created bank-money is invested in 
speculative wagering instruments, such as derivatives based on futures, swaps, 
and options.  Such betting instruments are not connected with transactions in 
the real economy. According to Prof John Gray of Oxford University, (4) 
derivatives have created a “virtual financial economy” which “has a terrible 
potential for disrupting the underlying real economy as seen in the collapse in 
1995 of Barings, Britain’s oldest bank”.  It is therefore no surprise that 
George Soros has described derivatives as “hydrogen bombs”.  Warren Buffet 
described them as “financial weapons of mass destruction”.  The Bank for 
International Settlements (BIS) currently estimates the notional amount of all 
outstanding derivatives (including credit default swaps) to be a staggering 600 
trillion dollars, more than 10 times the size of the world economy. (BIS, 
September 2008, pg 20).

Although debt-financing cannot be ruled out, the solution lies in a shift to 
equity-based financing, posited on profit and loss sharing, which is the 
primary characteristic of Islamic Finance.  In this equitable manner, economic 
effort would be directed at providing useful goods and services, instead of 
simply making money out of money.  At the same time, the wide gap between the 
supply of money and the supply of real goods and services would be decisively 
narrowed.  The distinguishing  features and benefits of Islamic Banking were 
aptly summarized by the Islamic Development Bank, based in Jeddah, (established 
1975) in the following words:

“Islamic banking is distinctive in two respects:  concentrating on the real 
sector of the economy, it imparts tremendous stability to the economic system 
by achieving an identity between monetary flows and goods and services, and by 
operating on a system of profit and loss sharing in its evolved state, it 
insulates the society from the debt-mountain on the analogy that if the 
economies enter into recessionary or deflationary phases, the principles of 
profit and loss sharing protects the states and economic operators from the 
evils of accumulation of interest and minimizes defaults and bankruptcies.” (5)

--

1.  See generally the article entitled “The End of Prosperity” by Prof. 
Ferguson of Harvard, published in Time, October 13, 2008, at pages 18 to 21.

2.  Dr M Umer Chapra, economics advisor to the Islamic Development Bank of 
Jeddah in a paper entitled “The Global Financial Crisis”.  (Can Islamic Finance 
Help? (5/11/2008) (shorter version).

3.  James Robertson, Transforming Economic Life : A  Millennial Challenge, 
Green Books, Devon, 1998.

4.  John Gray, False Dawn : The Delusions of Capitalism, Grunte Books, London, 
1998, p62.

5.   See the written submission of the Islamic Development Bank to the Supreme 
Court of Pakistan in 1999 in connection with its landmark judgment declaring 
all prevailing forms of interest as unlawful according to Islamic Law.  The 
judgment was delivered on the 23 December 1999.



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