From: mansoor munir [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, August 21, 2009 8:54 AM
To: Sameer Goshi
Subject: BBC News - Is Islamic finance the answer?

 



By Robin Brant 

Source: <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8025410.stm>
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8025410.stm 

Experts in Islamic finance believe their way of doing business has shielded
them from the global credit crisis.
But how does it differ from conventional Western finance? 
A former executive director of the International Monetary Fund, Dr Abbas
Mirakhor, says wider Islamic economics relies on God's guidance, handed down
almost 1,400 years ago. 
There is a "consciousness of a supreme creator and a system that he has
provided", he says. 
What we know as the conventional Western way does not have that, which is
"really the major difference between the two", he adds. 
In practical terms, the most significant difference is that charging
interest is not allowed in Islamic finance. 
Neither are most forms of speculative investment permitted, such as hedging
or derivatives trading. 
"We don't recognise the concept of interest... to look for some profit from
trading money," explains Dr Bambang Brodjonegoro from the Islamic
Development Bank. 
"In the Islamic concept, money is strictly for the purpose of exchange or
storing value, but not for the transaction of looking for excessive profit,"
he says. 
Sharing risks
How then, does an Islamic bank, and a customer who puts money in that bank,
make a profit? 
The system is asset-based, with tangible assets or commodities at the heart
of it. There are buyers and sellers, not borrowers and lenders. 
Here is a comparison. 
In Los Angeles a customer who wants to borrow money to buy a car would go to
a conventional bank and agree a loan. The bank would hand over the money. 
There would be regular repayments, which include interest accrued on the
loan. 
In Lahore a customer could go to an Islamic bank and sign a contract with
the bank to buy a car from them. 
The bank would not loan the money but buy the car itself. Then it would sell
it to the customer at a mark up. 
The customer would agree to pay back the cost in instalments over a regular
period. 
One of the core principles at the heart of Islamic economics is risk
sharing. The bank and the people who put their money in it share any profit,
or loss, from investments. 
"In Islam we appreciate merit, so if someone works harder in a
business...they (the bank) will get the sharing benefit," explains Dr
Brodjonegoro. 
"The more important thing is that there will be no bank that rules
everything. It will be bank and borrowers at the same level and they share
the risk and benefit." 
Alternative way
This sense of equality is important. It is one of the defining
characteristics which proponents of Islamic economics say make it different
from the conventional western way. 
Islamic economics also highlights a belief in benefitting the wider Muslim
community. 
The former IMF Executive Director Dr Mirakhor says that it chimes with "a
movement toward becoming more 'other conscious'...having consciousness about
the other fellow, about the general public interest." 
This contrasts with what he described as the "simple narrow basis of self
interest which motivates, supposedly, the economic agents in the liberal
economic system." 
Some see the Islamic model as an alternative. Others see it as complementary
to the system which has dominated the western world. 
"I don't think that this Islamic banking system is the alternative, that we
have one or the other. I think this is a complimentary service, a way of
doing service," says Prof Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, Secretary General of the
Organization of Islamic Countries. 
"It needs to be an option there where people can find different ways of
doing the same thing." 
Compromising principles
Islamic economics is not the exclusive preserve of Muslims. 
London is emerging as a major financial centre for Islamic finance. Islamic
banking products are also widely used by non Muslims in Malaysia 
"This is an alternative system that can be applied to everybody. Everybody
can use it regardless of their religion," says Dr Brodjonegoro from the
Islamic Development Bank. 
Major banks like Britain's HSBC and Citi of the US have set up Islamic
banking subsidiaries that are flourishing. Some of the champions of the
Islamic way want to see business expand beyond the natural market of Muslim
countries. 
They believe that now, more than ever, there is a market for non Muslims who
share in the values espoused in Islamic economics. 
But there are some who fear that by expanding the Islamic way is becoming
less Islamic. 
Time to reflect
"Unfortunately what is happening is that Islamic finance in some ways is
moving more and more closely to the conventional finance," says Prof Habib
Ahmed, a world authority on Islamic finance. 
"If you look at the development in the past few years, Islamic finance
appears to be mimicking most of the products of conventional finance." 
There has never been a better time to champion an economic model which is
different to the one laying in shreds on Wall Street, says Prof Ahmed. But
he believes that the Islamic concept is being diluted. 
"As people after this crisis are looking for solutions...the Islamic finance
industry is moving towards that very system," he says. 
"I think it is time for Islamic finance to pause and think of the direction
it is taking". 




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