---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: ASUTAY M. <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 4:59 PM
Subject: Islamic finance, the Gulf and London¹s future as a global hub
To:


  Dear All,

Please see the short piece (through the link below) I have written at the
Conversation website on Islamic finance and London's aim to become a hub
for Islamic finance.

https://theconversation.com/islamic-finance-the-gulf-and-londons-future-as-a-global-hub-19866

Mehmet

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  6 November 2013, 6.24pm GMT Islamic finance, the Gulf and London’s future
as a global hub

  AUTHOR

   1.  Mehmet Asutay

   Reader in Political Economy (Middle East and Islamic Political Economy
   and Finance) at Durham University
    <https://theconversation.com/profiles/mehmet-asutay-108274>

 DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

Mehmet Asutay does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive
funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this
article, and has no relevant affiliations.

*The Conversation is funded by the following universities:* Aberdeen,
Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, City, Glasgow Caledonian, Liverpool, Open,
Salford, Sheffield, Surrey, UCL and Warwick.

*It also receives funding from:* Hefce, Hefcw, SFC, RCUK, The Nuffield
Foundation, The Wellcome Trust and The Alliance for Useful Evidence
  Looking east. Lewis Whyld/PA

David Cameron’s highly symbolic
speech<https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/world-islamic-economic-forum-prime-ministers-speech>
at
last week’s 9th World Islamic Economic Forum confirmed the government’s
commitment to develop London as an important hub for Islamic finance.
London Mayor Boris Johnson was also keen to encourage investment,
pledging £100m
to attract tech
start-ups<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2480251/Boris-Johnson-Im-London-Mayor-Muslim-extraction.html?ico=home%5Eheadlines>
from
the Muslim world.

It is not surprising to see both national and local government seek this
investment, as London is in many ways ideally placed to benefit from a
growth in this special form of
finance<https://theconversation.com/explainer-how-does-islamic-finance-work-19670>.
In the race to attract the sector, London enjoys various historic and
cultural advantages over many of its rival financial centres.

Sharia-compliant banking has been handled in the UK since the early 1980s
and London has long been at the centre of business and investment in the
Muslim world. In the 90s, London began to provide more sophisticated and
structured Islamic services, as local financial services and legal firms
acquired enhanced knowledge and experience of the market.

Over the years, London has managed to maintain the industry. Last year it
had about US$18.5 billion in sharia-compliant assets, the 9th most of any
city in the world.

This experience in Islamic banking gives the city a degree of social
capital in the field, unmatched by rival financial centres in the West.

The UK government now recognises Islamic finance as a valuable proposition,
one which can bring innovation and diversity in the well-established UK
market. Ultimately, it can support London as an international financial
centre.
 Why Islamic finance?

Current economic reality, both in the UK and globally, provides an
important rationale for the government’s desire to attract capital from the
Gulf.

With most Gulf investors aiming for sharia compliant investment or Islamic
financing, moves by UK governments over the years to facilitate them are
simply responses to economic conditions. After all, given Islamic finance
has already been behind developments like the Shard or the Olympic Village,
local and national governments would be foolish to ignore its potential. In
addition, financial inclusion in terms of providing financial access to
Muslim community according to their religious tenets has played a role as
well.

The recent commitment by the UK government again aims to attract further
capital to London, accompanied by the political will to provide a more
welcoming environment by extending the Islamic finance sphere through
sukuk, or Islamic bonds, for example.

There are four ways in which Islamic finance could be developed in the UK:

*Engagement:* The relevant authorities must engage with businesses, retail
groups, Sharia scholars, regulators and the financial product providers
themselves to ensure the right environment for Islamic finance to flourish
in London. Coordinating all these various groups will be tough, and that is
why the formation of an “Islamic finance task
force<https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-launches-first-islamic-finance-task-force--2>”
is essential, as announced earlier this year.

*Investment:* Existing UK-based Islamic banks and financial institutions
should invest in product design, launch and distribution to be able to
maintain a competitive edge.

*Competitiveness:* The legal, regulatory and financial environment should
work in coordination to ensure London’s competitiveness in terms of
providing the right environment for future Islamic finance activity in the
capital.

*Demonstration:* This will require providing all the necessary conditions
for the existence and growth of the market. The Prime Minister’s indication
of a sovereign sukuk sends a symbolic signal to other competing markets
indicating that London is taking this seriously.

This would all be part of a process of increasing the provision of
financial services at all levels in society, something development
economists call “financial deepening”, an important boost to economic
growth.
 Global rivals

While London has for some time aimed at becoming an Islamic finance centre,
other financial centres including Tokyo, Hong Kong and New York, could
perhaps be considered as potential competitors.

However, none of these rivals appear to have London’s political backing.
This not only enables appropriate laws to be passed, but it also provides
Islamic capital with confidence that it will be well received in the
country.

Tokyo remains hesitant, while New York still strategically keeps away from
Islamic finance. Hong Kong represent important competition, being open and
welcoming to Islamic finance but London still has the competitive edge.

Istanbul promises to become a serious competitor in future, with a growing
Islamic finance sector based in the Muslim world’s second largest economy
benefiting from close ties to both East and West.

Entirely new rivals may emerge, but Islamic finance’s risk averse attitude
generally motivates it to remain in known traditional markets rather than
new shores which may have higher returns, but also higher risks.

Recent commitments to develop Islamic finance in the UK represent a
positive move. The UK economy will derive further benefits from attracting
Islamic capital, and London’s position as a global financial centre will be
strengthened.
------------------------------

*For further reading on the subject, see our Explainer: how does Islamic
finance work?
<https://theconversation.com/explainer-how-does-islamic-finance-work-19670>*

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