Muslim countries urged to rally behind Islamic financial system
P.K. Abdul Ghafour | Arab News

Umer Chapra, a well-known Saudi economist and winner of the King Faisal
International Prize for Islamic studies, has called upon Muslim countries to
rally behind the Islamic financial system in order to fight poverty and
strengthen financial stability in their countries.

Speaking to Arab News, Chapra said the Islamic financial system has now won
international acceptance with the opening of many Islamic banks and
financial institutions in non-Muslim countries including the United States,
Britain, France, Italy, Australia and Singapore.

He said some Muslim countries were still reluctant in applying Islamic
finance because of hesitation about the ultimate outcome. “The system is
still new for this part of the world. Some fear that it would reduce the
pace of economic growth and cause problems to the financial system,” he
said.

However, Chapra pointed out that central banks in many Muslim countries have
displayed enthusiasm to implement the system. Chapra, who has written 16
books and presented several research papers on Islamic banking and finance
at international seminars and conferences, is optimistic about the system’s
future.

He said Western economists have commended the solutions presented by the
Islamic financial system in solving the global crisis. A leading economist
in the US described Chapra’s anatomy of the crisis as the best he had seen.

Spelling out the solutions for the global crisis, Chapra said finance should
be given for real goods and services and not for imaginary ones. “The
proportion of equity in total finance needs to be increased while the
proportion of debt reduced. The leverage should also be controlled so that
credit could meet the ability of borrowers to repay,” he elaborated.

Islam prevents the sale of debts, which is one of the main causes of the
present crisis, Chapra said. “When you sell debt you are actually passing
the risk to the new purchaser. So you will have no incentive to evaluate the
debt proposal. This leads to a rapid expansion of debts,” he said.

Chapra estimated the derivatives market at more than $600 trillion, 12 times
more than the size of the world economy. “No wonder George Soros described
derivatives as hydrogen bombs while Warren Buffett called them financial
weapons of mass destruction,” he said.

The Saudi economist refuted suggestions that Japan was backing down from its
plan to introduce Islamic finance. “After the boom and bust in the Japanese
stock market in the 1990s, a great deal of effort has been made to reform
the country’s financial system. There has been tremendous desire among the
Japanese to know more about the Islamic system. They invited experts to
explain to them how Islamic finance works. They have shown interest in
applying certain aspects of the Islamic system in order to mitigate the
effect of the global crisis.”

Chapra added: “Some of their bankers and officials have come to Saudi
Arabia, to the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) and the Islamic Research and
Training Institute (IRTI) in order to know more about Islamic finance. They
have taken along with them a number of publications on the subject. This
shows there is tremendous interest among the Japanese about Islamic
finance.”

Asked why Japan was not introducing Islamic finance despite the change in
the country’s banking law to accommodate the system, he said: “It will take
time for countries to introduce a new system. Things will go slowly in the
beginning but gradually achieve momentum.”

He said Islamic banks were not directly affected by the global crisis, as
they were not indulged in any speculative business. “They have been giving
finance for real goods and services,” he said. However, he pointed out that
Islamic banks and financial institutions were indirectly affected as a
result of the economic downturn. “All banks are intertwined. The businesses
of some of their clients have gone down, and some clients have suffered
losses and are unable to repay their loans. Such things will affect even
genuine Islamic banks.”

Chapra, who is presently working as a research adviser at IRTI, spoke about
the growing global interest in Islamic finance. “A large number of
universities, even in the Western world, have started teaching the subject.
Harvard Law School in the US and Durham University in the UK are among them.
London and Singapore are competing with one another to become centers of
Islamic finance. India is also making preparations to introduce the system.”


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=6&section=0&article=126169&d=7&m=9&y=2009


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